Abstract

We estimate the number of immigrants in the United States classified by their country of origin from census data in 1970, 1980, 1990 and 2000. We find, both in cross-sectional tests and in panel data tests, that the size of the immigrant group from a country living in the U.S. is positively correlated with U.S. investments in that country. This national origin bias is strong for direct (FDI) and modest for indirect (equity holdings) investments. The results continue to hold even after controlling for the fundamentals hypothesized to affect foreign investments. The other economic geography variables of a country - physical distance from the U.S., race, language and religion - do not seem to affect U.S. investments in that country.

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