Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction
Foreign direct investment is a key ingredient of successful economic growth and development in developing countries--partly because the very essence of economic development is the rapid and efficient transfer and cross-border adoption of "best...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/1346346/foreign-direct-investment-poverty-reduction http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19600 |
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okr-10986-196002021-04-23T14:03:43Z Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction Klein, Michael Aaron, Carl Hadjimichael, Bita AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY ASSET STRIPPING BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL GOODS CHARITABLE CONTRIBUTIONS CITIZENS CIVIL SOCIETY COMPETITIVE MARKETS CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY CORRUPT PRACTICES CORRUPTION COST OF CAPITAL CRISES DEBT DEBT RELIEF DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DIVIDENDS DIVISION OF LABOR DOMESTIC COMPANIES DOMESTIC ECONOMY DOMESTIC FIRMS DOMESTIC INVESTORS ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH EMPLOYMENT EQUITY FLOWS EXPLOITATION EXPROPRIATION FDI FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL FLOWS FIRM SIZE FOREIGN FOREIGN COMPANIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS FOREIGN OWNERSHIP FOREIGN- OWNED FIRMS GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT FINANCE GROWTH RATES HOST COUNTRY HOST ECONOMY HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INCOME COUNTRIES INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME GROWTH INCOME INEQUALITY INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTORS LABOR FORCE MARKET POWER MARKET SIZE MATERIAL WELL-BEING MEDIUM-SIZED FIRMS NATIONAL LEVEL NATURAL RESOURCES OIL PER CAPITA INCOME POLICY ENVIRONMENT POLICY RESEARCH POLLUTERS POLLUTION CONTROL POOR COUNTRIES PORTFOLIO POVERTY ERADICATION POVERTY REDUCTION PRIVATE COMPANIES PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY PROPERTY RIGHTS RULE OF LAW SAFETY NET SAFETY NETS SANCTIONS SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE PROVISION SHAREHOLDINGS SKILLED WORKERS SMALL FIRMS SOCIAL SERVICES TAX BASE TAX INCENTIVES TAX REVENUE TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPARENCY URBAN AIR POLLUTION VESTED INTERESTS WAGES WATER SUPPLY Foreign direct investment is a key ingredient of successful economic growth and development in developing countries--partly because the very essence of economic development is the rapid and efficient transfer and cross-border adoption of "best practices." Foreign direct investment is especially well suited to effecting this transfer and translating it into broad-based growth, not least by upgrading human capital. Growth is the single most important factor in poverty reduction, so foreign direct investment is also central to achieving that important World Bank goal. Government-led programs that improve social safety nets and explicitly redistribute assets and income might direct more of the fruits of growth to the poor. But these are complements--not alternatives--to sensible growth-oriented policies. And growth is needed to fund these government-led programs. Moreover, the delivery of social services to the poor--from insurance schemes to such basic services as water and energy--can clearly benefit from reliance on foreign investors. In short, foreign direct investment remains one of the most effective tools in the fight against poverty. 2014-08-21T20:04:25Z 2014-08-21T20:04:25Z 2001-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/1346346/foreign-direct-investment-poverty-reduction http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19600 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2613 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 |
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 |
AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY ASSET STRIPPING BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL GOODS CHARITABLE CONTRIBUTIONS CITIZENS CIVIL SOCIETY COMPETITIVE MARKETS CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY CORRUPT PRACTICES CORRUPTION COST OF CAPITAL CRISES DEBT DEBT RELIEF DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DIVIDENDS DIVISION OF LABOR DOMESTIC COMPANIES DOMESTIC ECONOMY DOMESTIC FIRMS DOMESTIC INVESTORS ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH EMPLOYMENT EQUITY FLOWS EXPLOITATION EXPROPRIATION FDI FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL FLOWS FIRM SIZE FOREIGN FOREIGN COMPANIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS FOREIGN OWNERSHIP FOREIGN- OWNED FIRMS GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT FINANCE GROWTH RATES HOST COUNTRY HOST ECONOMY HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INCOME COUNTRIES INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME GROWTH INCOME INEQUALITY INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTORS LABOR FORCE MARKET POWER MARKET SIZE MATERIAL WELL-BEING MEDIUM-SIZED FIRMS NATIONAL LEVEL NATURAL RESOURCES OIL PER CAPITA INCOME POLICY ENVIRONMENT POLICY RESEARCH POLLUTERS POLLUTION CONTROL POOR COUNTRIES PORTFOLIO POVERTY ERADICATION POVERTY REDUCTION PRIVATE COMPANIES PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY PROPERTY RIGHTS RULE OF LAW SAFETY NET SAFETY NETS SANCTIONS SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE PROVISION SHAREHOLDINGS SKILLED WORKERS SMALL FIRMS SOCIAL SERVICES TAX BASE TAX INCENTIVES TAX REVENUE TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPARENCY URBAN AIR POLLUTION VESTED INTERESTS WAGES WATER SUPPLY |
spellingShingle |
AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY ASSET STRIPPING BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT CAPITAL FLOWS CAPITAL GOODS CHARITABLE CONTRIBUTIONS CITIZENS CIVIL SOCIETY COMPETITIVE MARKETS CORPORATE GOVERNANCE CORPORATE RESPONSIBILITY CORRUPT PRACTICES CORRUPTION COST OF CAPITAL CRISES DEBT DEBT RELIEF DEVELOPED COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DIVIDENDS DIVISION OF LABOR DOMESTIC COMPANIES DOMESTIC ECONOMY DOMESTIC FIRMS DOMESTIC INVESTORS ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH EMPLOYMENT EQUITY FLOWS EXPLOITATION EXPROPRIATION FDI FINANCIAL CRISES FINANCIAL FLOWS FIRM SIZE FOREIGN FOREIGN COMPANIES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN FIRMS FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS FOREIGN OWNERSHIP FOREIGN- OWNED FIRMS GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT FINANCE GROWTH RATES HOST COUNTRY HOST ECONOMY HUMAN CAPITAL IMPORTS INCOME INCOME COUNTRIES INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME GROWTH INCOME INEQUALITY INSURANCE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS INVESTMENT DECISIONS INVESTORS LABOR FORCE MARKET POWER MARKET SIZE MATERIAL WELL-BEING MEDIUM-SIZED FIRMS NATIONAL LEVEL NATURAL RESOURCES OIL PER CAPITA INCOME POLICY ENVIRONMENT POLICY RESEARCH POLLUTERS POLLUTION CONTROL POOR COUNTRIES PORTFOLIO POVERTY ERADICATION POVERTY REDUCTION PRIVATE COMPANIES PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT PRODUCTIVITY PROFITABILITY PROPERTY RIGHTS RULE OF LAW SAFETY NET SAFETY NETS SANCTIONS SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE PROVISION SHAREHOLDINGS SKILLED WORKERS SMALL FIRMS SOCIAL SERVICES TAX BASE TAX INCENTIVES TAX REVENUE TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSITION ECONOMIES TRANSPARENCY URBAN AIR POLLUTION VESTED INTERESTS WAGES WATER SUPPLY Klein, Michael Aaron, Carl Hadjimichael, Bita Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 2613 |
description |
Foreign direct investment is a key
ingredient of successful economic growth and development in
developing countries--partly because the very essence of
economic development is the rapid and efficient transfer and
cross-border adoption of "best practices." Foreign
direct investment is especially well suited to effecting
this transfer and translating it into broad-based growth,
not least by upgrading human capital. Growth is the single
most important factor in poverty reduction, so foreign
direct investment is also central to achieving that
important World Bank goal. Government-led programs that
improve social safety nets and explicitly redistribute
assets and income might direct more of the fruits of growth
to the poor. But these are complements--not alternatives--to
sensible growth-oriented policies. And growth is needed to
fund these government-led programs. Moreover, the delivery
of social services to the poor--from insurance schemes to
such basic services as water and energy--can clearly benefit
from reliance on foreign investors. In short, foreign direct
investment remains one of the most effective tools in the
fight against poverty. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper |
author |
Klein, Michael Aaron, Carl Hadjimichael, Bita |
author_facet |
Klein, Michael Aaron, Carl Hadjimichael, Bita |
author_sort |
Klein, Michael |
title |
Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction |
title_short |
Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction |
title_full |
Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction |
title_fullStr |
Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction |
title_full_unstemmed |
Foreign Direct Investment and Poverty Reduction |
title_sort |
foreign direct investment and poverty reduction |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/1346346/foreign-direct-investment-poverty-reduction http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19600 |
_version_ |
1764440135008518144 |