Abstract

Aim of the paperThe paper aims at describing and explaining net profit flows per country for the period 1980–2009. Net profit flows result from Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) stock and profit repatriation: inward stock creating a profit outflow and outward FDI stock a profit inflow. Profit flows, especially ‘normal’ ones are not commonly researched.Theoretical backgroundAccording to world-system theory, countries are part of a system characterised by a core, semi-periphery and periphery, as shown by network analyses of trade relations. Network analyses based on ownership relations of TransNational Corporations (TNCs) show that the top 50 firms that control about 40% of the world economy are almost exclusively located in core countries. So, we may expect a hierarchy in net profit flows with core countries on top and the periphery at the bottom. FDI outflows from the core countries especially rose in the 1990s, so we may expect that the difference has grown in time.Data and resultsA dataset on 'net profit flow' per country is developed. There are diverging developments in net profit flows since the 1980s, as expected: ever more positive for core countries, negative and ever lower for semi-peripheral and peripheral countries, in particular from the 1990s onwards. A fixed effects quantile regression using publicly available data confirms the prediction that peripheral countries share a unique characteristic: their outward investments do not have a positive influence on net profit flow as is the case with semi-peripheral and core countries. The most probable explanation is that peripheral outward investments are indirectly owned by firms located in core and semi-peripheral countries, so all peripheral profit inflows end up in those countries.

Highlights

  • Literature shows two opposite views on the effects of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) on the economies of host countries

  • FDI would constitute an inflow of capital, knowledge and technology, and would boost economic growth of developing countries in particular as these countries would suffer from shortages in these areas [1,2]

  • The calculations yield a series of net profit flow per country

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Summary

Introduction

Literature shows two opposite views on the effects of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) on the economies of host countries. The present paper focuses on analysing level and development of net profit in- or outflow of countries–‘drain of wealth’–in 1980–2009. We shall investigate the ‘normal’ profit flows, meaning the flows that are officially registered as such and shall look into a number of factors that might explain them. The paper investigates a large part of the period of neoliberalism, 1980–2009 [11]. This period witnessed a rise in FDI from 1990 onwards, in particular from developed countries, and changes in the institutional setup of countries such as liberalisation which might have affected changes in net profit flows between countries. The third goal is to give the most general picture possible by aiming at maximum coverage in number of countries

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