The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect?

After the fall of communism, Central and Eastern European countries have experienced a transition process in which a remarkable increase is observed in foreign direct investment flows into the region. During this process, when transition countries tried to adopt a free-market economy instead of a c...

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Main Authors: Tugba Akin, Ozge Bolaman Avcı
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEECA 2020-08-01
Series:Journal of Eastern European and Central Asian Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.ieeca.org/journal/index.php/JEECAR/article/view/446
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spelling doaj-42546a5276554760a091d85fdd0c25ef2020-11-25T03:45:22ZengIEECAJournal of Eastern European and Central Asian Research2328-82722328-82802020-08-017210.15549/jeecar.v7i2.446The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect? Tugba Akin0Ozge Bolaman Avcı1Aydın Adnan Menderes UniversityAydın Adnan Menderes University After the fall of communism, Central and Eastern European countries have experienced a transition process in which a remarkable increase is observed in foreign direct investment flows into the region. During this process, when transition countries tried to adopt a free-market economy instead of a closed centrally structured economy, funds obtained through FDI constituted an essential way of financing for these countries that were trying to restructure their economy. Study questions the existence of the crowding-out effect by using data from Eastern European Countries, including Romania, the Russian Federation, Moldova, Poland, Bulgaria, Hungary, Slovak Republic, Ukraine. With this aim, PANIC Bai and Ng (2004), the bias-corrected PANIC Westerlund and Larsson (2009) unit root tests, and panel data analysis are implemented. Results obtained were consistent with theoretical expectations and showed that FDI had a crowding-out effect in the short run but, in the long run, a crowding-in impact on domestic investment. https://www.ieeca.org/journal/index.php/JEECAR/article/view/446Foreign Direct InvestmentDomestic Investmenttransit economies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tugba Akin
Ozge Bolaman Avcı
spellingShingle Tugba Akin
Ozge Bolaman Avcı
The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect?
Journal of Eastern European and Central Asian Research
Foreign Direct Investment
Domestic Investment
transit economies
author_facet Tugba Akin
Ozge Bolaman Avcı
author_sort Tugba Akin
title The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect?
title_short The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect?
title_full The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect?
title_fullStr The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect?
title_full_unstemmed The interaction between Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Investment: Is there crowding out effect?
title_sort interaction between foreign direct investment and domestic investment: is there crowding out effect?
publisher IEECA
series Journal of Eastern European and Central Asian Research
issn 2328-8272
2328-8280
publishDate 2020-08-01
description After the fall of communism, Central and Eastern European countries have experienced a transition process in which a remarkable increase is observed in foreign direct investment flows into the region. During this process, when transition countries tried to adopt a free-market economy instead of a closed centrally structured economy, funds obtained through FDI constituted an essential way of financing for these countries that were trying to restructure their economy. Study questions the existence of the crowding-out effect by using data from Eastern European Countries, including Romania, the Russian Federation, Moldova, Poland, Bulgaria, Hungary, Slovak Republic, Ukraine. With this aim, PANIC Bai and Ng (2004), the bias-corrected PANIC Westerlund and Larsson (2009) unit root tests, and panel data analysis are implemented. Results obtained were consistent with theoretical expectations and showed that FDI had a crowding-out effect in the short run but, in the long run, a crowding-in impact on domestic investment.
topic Foreign Direct Investment
Domestic Investment
transit economies
url https://www.ieeca.org/journal/index.php/JEECAR/article/view/446
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