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Searching with a thematic focus on Foreign Direct Investment, Finance policy, International capital flows FDI, International capital flows in China
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Entry modes of foreign direct investment in china: a multinomial logit approach
Lancaster University Management School, 2004Based on transactions cost economics, the study establishes a multinomial logit model in which foreign invested firms are allowed to choose among the four entry modes of FDI in China.DocumentDictatorship, democracy and institutions: macro policy in China and India
Economic and Political Weekly, India, 2004This article explores whether macroeconomic policies are influenced by the political structure. The authors compare reform period policy choices and outcomes in China and India.DocumentImpacts of R&D, exports and FDI on productivity in Chinese manufacturing firms
Lancaster University Management School, 2003This paper assesses the impacts of research and development (R&D), export and the presence of FDI on Chinese manufacturing productivity.DocumentAttracting investment to China
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2003This paper examines China's progress to date in attracting foreign investment and in moving towards a more rules-based business environment.Highlights of the paper include:China has made significant progress in providing a business environment conducive to foreign direct investment (FDI) since the major shift to economic reform in 1978FDI has enabled China to establish new branchesDocumentChasing the dragon: accounting for the under performance of India by comparison with China in attracting foreign direct investment
Development Studies Association, UK and Ireland, 2003This paper seeks to explain why, although both China and India had similar levels of foreign direct investment (FDI) in the late 1970s, China now attracts far more FDI than India.The analysis focuses on the way in which national and sub-national governments have gone about the task of promoting inward foreign direct investment, and also considers how the governments of the two countries have faDocumentHow can developing countries benefit from globalization: the case of China
Institute of World Economics and Politics, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS), 2003China’s experience has often been used as a successful example to prove that developing countries can actually benefit from globalisation.DocumentClean up your computer: working conditions in the electronics sector
Catholic Fund for Overseas Development, 2004This paper analyses the labour standards and working conditions in computing manufacturing, particularly in developing countries where many stages of computer production are carried out by low-skilled and low-paid workers.The paper finds that unlike their counterparts in the clothing and footwear sector, computer companies have thus far escaped scrutiny on labour issues.DocumentLevel playing field? Making world trade work for all
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2003The poorest countries are small players in world trade. The combined exports of the 48 least developed countries (LDCs) accounted for only 0.35 per cent of world trade in 1995. Can trade agreements be made to work better for LDCs? Can technical advice improve the negotiating capacity of LDCs?DocumentChina’s plunge into the world economy: prudence or poor judgement?
id21 Development Research Reporting Service, 2002China, post-Mao, is dramatically engaged with the world economy. Export growth has exploded by a massive 500 percent since 1980. China now trusts in exports as the engine of growth and the safety net for a domestic restructuring which has created high levels of urban unemployment. What are the consequences of abandoning Mao’s strategy of self-reliance?DocumentTariff and FDI liberalization: what to expect from China's entry into the WTO?
Global Development Network, 2002What features determine the final outcome of the liberalisation process? Who gains and loses with the liberalisation of FDI?Pages
