Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages

Many countries compete against one another in attracting foreign investors by offering ever more generous incentive packages and justifying their actions with the productivity gains that are expected to accrue to domestic producers from knowledge e...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Javorcik, Beata
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/10/2054540/foreign-direct-investment-increase-productivity-domestic-firms-search-spillovers-through-backward-linkages
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19210
id okr-10986-19210
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTING
AFFILIATES
AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY
DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
DOMESTIC FIRMS
DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC SUPPLIERS
ECONOMIC REVIEW
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
EMPLOYMENT
EXTERNALITIES
FDI
FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FIRM SIZE
FOREIGN AFFILIATES
FOREIGN CAPITAL
FOREIGN COMPANIES
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EQUITY PARTICIPATION
FOREIGN EQUITY SHARE
FOREIGN FIRMS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN PRESENCE
FOREIGN SUPPLIERS
GLOBAL MARKETS
HOST COUNTRY
IMPORT LIBERALIZATION
IMPORTED INPUTS
IMPORTS
INCREASING COMPETITION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INTERMEDIATE INPUTS
INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTORIES
KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS
LIQUIDATION
LOCAL FIRMS
LOCAL MARKET
LOCAL SUPPLIERS
MANUFACTURING FIRMS
MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES
NATIONAL TREATMENT
POLICY MAKERS
POLICY RESEARCH
POSITIVE EXTERNALITIES
POSITIVE SPILLOVERS
PRESENT VALUE
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCERS
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PRODUCTIVITY SPILLOVERS
PROFITABILITY
PUBLIC POLICY
SCALE ECONOMIES
STANDARD ERRORS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS
TECHNOLOGY SPILLOVERS
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
TRANSITION ECONOMY
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT
VERTICAL LINKAGES
spellingShingle ACCOUNTING
AFFILIATES
AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY
DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
DOMESTIC FIRMS
DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES
DOMESTIC MARKET
DOMESTIC SUPPLIERS
ECONOMIC REVIEW
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
EMPIRICAL STUDIES
EMPLOYMENT
EXTERNALITIES
FDI
FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS
FINANCIAL SECTOR
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
FIRM SIZE
FOREIGN AFFILIATES
FOREIGN CAPITAL
FOREIGN COMPANIES
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EQUITY PARTICIPATION
FOREIGN EQUITY SHARE
FOREIGN FIRMS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN OWNERSHIP
FOREIGN PRESENCE
FOREIGN SUPPLIERS
GLOBAL MARKETS
HOST COUNTRY
IMPORT LIBERALIZATION
IMPORTED INPUTS
IMPORTS
INCREASING COMPETITION
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
INTERMEDIATE INPUTS
INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INVENTORIES
KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS
LIQUIDATION
LOCAL FIRMS
LOCAL MARKET
LOCAL SUPPLIERS
MANUFACTURING FIRMS
MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES
NATIONAL TREATMENT
POLICY MAKERS
POLICY RESEARCH
POSITIVE EXTERNALITIES
POSITIVE SPILLOVERS
PRESENT VALUE
PRIVATIZATION
PRODUCERS
PRODUCTION PROCESS
PRODUCTIVITY
PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH
PRODUCTIVITY SPILLOVERS
PROFITABILITY
PUBLIC POLICY
SCALE ECONOMIES
STANDARD ERRORS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS
TECHNOLOGY SPILLOVERS
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TRANSITION COUNTRIES
TRANSITION ECONOMIES
TRANSITION ECONOMY
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT
VERTICAL LINKAGES
Javorcik, Beata
Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Lithuania
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2923
description Many countries compete against one another in attracting foreign investors by offering ever more generous incentive packages and justifying their actions with the productivity gains that are expected to accrue to domestic producers from knowledge externalities generated by foreign affiliates. Despite this being hugely important to public policy choices, there is little conclusive evidence indicating that domestic firms benefit from foreign presence in their sector. It is possible, though, that researchers have been looking for foreign direct investment (FDI) spillovers in the wrong place. Multinationals have an incentive to prevent information leakage that would enhance the performance of their local competitors in the same industry but at the same time may want to transfer knowledge to their local suppliers in other sectors. Spillovers from FDI may be, therefore, more likely to take place through backward linkages-that is, contacts between domestic suppliers of intermediate inputs and their multinational clients-and thus would not have been captured by the earlier literature. This paper focuses on the understudied issue of FDI spillovers through backward linkages and goes beyond existing studies by shedding some light on factors driving this phenomenon. It also improves over existing literature by addressing several econometric problems that may have biased the results of earlier research. Based on a firm-level panel data set from Lithuania, the estimation results are consistent with the existence of productivity spillovers. They suggest that a 10 percent increase in the foreign presence in downstream sectors is associated with 0.38 percent rise in output of each domestic firm in the supplying industry. The data indicate that these spillovers are not restricted geographically, since local firms seem to benefit from the operation of downstream foreign affiliates on their own, as well as in other regions. The results further show that greater productivity benefits are associated with domestic-market, rather than export-oriented, foreign affiliates. But no difference is detected between the effects of fully-owned foreign firms and those with joint domestic and foreign ownership. The findings of a positive correlation between productivity growth of domestic firms and the increase in multinational presence in downstream sectors should not, however, be interpreted as a call for subsidizing FDI. These results are consistent with the existence of knowledge spillovers from foreign affiliates to their local suppliers, but they may also be a result of increased competition in upstream sectors. While the former case would call for offering FDI incentive packages, it would not be the optimal policy in the latter. Certainly more research is needed to disentangle these two effects.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Javorcik, Beata
author_facet Javorcik, Beata
author_sort Javorcik, Beata
title Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages
title_short Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages
title_full Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages
title_fullStr Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages
title_full_unstemmed Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages
title_sort does foreign direct investment increase the productivity of domestic firms : in search of spillovers through backward linkages
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/10/2054540/foreign-direct-investment-increase-productivity-domestic-firms-search-spillovers-through-backward-linkages
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19210
_version_ 1764439748844191744
spelling okr-10986-192102021-04-23T14:03:43Z Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms : In Search of Spillovers through Backward Linkages Javorcik, Beata ACCOUNTING AFFILIATES AVERAGE PRODUCTIVITY DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DOMESTIC FIRMS DOMESTIC INDUSTRIES DOMESTIC MARKET DOMESTIC SUPPLIERS ECONOMIC REVIEW EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE EMPIRICAL STUDIES EMPLOYMENT EXTERNALITIES FDI FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS FINANCIAL SECTOR FINANCIAL SUPPORT FIRM SIZE FOREIGN AFFILIATES FOREIGN CAPITAL FOREIGN COMPANIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EQUITY PARTICIPATION FOREIGN EQUITY SHARE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS FOREIGN OWNERSHIP FOREIGN PRESENCE FOREIGN SUPPLIERS GLOBAL MARKETS HOST COUNTRY IMPORT LIBERALIZATION IMPORTED INPUTS IMPORTS INCREASING COMPETITION INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY INTERMEDIATE INPUTS INTERMEDIATE PRODUCTS INTERNATIONAL TRADE INVENTORIES KNOWLEDGE SPILLOVERS LIQUIDATION LOCAL FIRMS LOCAL MARKET LOCAL SUPPLIERS MANUFACTURING FIRMS MEDIUM-SIZED ENTERPRISES NATIONAL TREATMENT POLICY MAKERS POLICY RESEARCH POSITIVE EXTERNALITIES POSITIVE SPILLOVERS PRESENT VALUE PRIVATIZATION PRODUCERS PRODUCTION PROCESS PRODUCTIVITY PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY SPILLOVERS PROFITABILITY PUBLIC POLICY SCALE ECONOMIES STANDARD ERRORS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS TECHNOLOGY SPILLOVERS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TRANSITION COUNTRIES TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSITION ECONOMY TRANSPORT TRANSPORT EQUIPMENT VERTICAL LINKAGES Many countries compete against one another in attracting foreign investors by offering ever more generous incentive packages and justifying their actions with the productivity gains that are expected to accrue to domestic producers from knowledge externalities generated by foreign affiliates. Despite this being hugely important to public policy choices, there is little conclusive evidence indicating that domestic firms benefit from foreign presence in their sector. It is possible, though, that researchers have been looking for foreign direct investment (FDI) spillovers in the wrong place. Multinationals have an incentive to prevent information leakage that would enhance the performance of their local competitors in the same industry but at the same time may want to transfer knowledge to their local suppliers in other sectors. Spillovers from FDI may be, therefore, more likely to take place through backward linkages-that is, contacts between domestic suppliers of intermediate inputs and their multinational clients-and thus would not have been captured by the earlier literature. This paper focuses on the understudied issue of FDI spillovers through backward linkages and goes beyond existing studies by shedding some light on factors driving this phenomenon. It also improves over existing literature by addressing several econometric problems that may have biased the results of earlier research. Based on a firm-level panel data set from Lithuania, the estimation results are consistent with the existence of productivity spillovers. They suggest that a 10 percent increase in the foreign presence in downstream sectors is associated with 0.38 percent rise in output of each domestic firm in the supplying industry. The data indicate that these spillovers are not restricted geographically, since local firms seem to benefit from the operation of downstream foreign affiliates on their own, as well as in other regions. The results further show that greater productivity benefits are associated with domestic-market, rather than export-oriented, foreign affiliates. But no difference is detected between the effects of fully-owned foreign firms and those with joint domestic and foreign ownership. The findings of a positive correlation between productivity growth of domestic firms and the increase in multinational presence in downstream sectors should not, however, be interpreted as a call for subsidizing FDI. These results are consistent with the existence of knowledge spillovers from foreign affiliates to their local suppliers, but they may also be a result of increased competition in upstream sectors. While the former case would call for offering FDI incentive packages, it would not be the optimal policy in the latter. Certainly more research is needed to disentangle these two effects. 2014-08-01T18:48:25Z 2014-08-01T18:48:25Z 2002-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2002/10/2054540/foreign-direct-investment-increase-productivity-domestic-firms-search-spillovers-through-backward-linkages http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19210 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2923 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research Europe and Central Asia Lithuania