The Determinants of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) A Panel Data Analysis for the Emerging Asian Economies
ATM Omor Faruq

TL;DR
This study analyzes economic, institutional, and political factors influencing FDI inflows in 24 emerging Asian economies from 2002 to 2018, highlighting economic factors as the most significant determinants.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive panel data analysis identifying key economic, institutional, and political determinants of FDI in emerging Asian economies, with a focus on their relative importance.
Findings
Economic factors significantly influence FDI inflows.
Business Disclosure Index is the key institutional determinant.
Political stability positively impacts FDI inflows.
Abstract
In this paper, we explore the economic, institutional, and political/governmental factors in attracting Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) inflows in the emerging twenty-four Asian economies. To examine the significant determinants of FDI, the study uses panel data for a period of seventeen years (2002-2018). The panel methodology enables us to deal with endogeneity and other issues. Multiple regression models are done for empirical evidence. The study focuses on a holistic approach and considers different variables under three broad areas: economic, institutional, and political aspects. The variables include Market Size, Trade Openness, Inflation, Natural Resource, Lending Rate, Capital Formation as economic factors and Business Regulatory Environment and Business Disclosure Index as institutional factors and Political Stability, Government Effectiveness, and Rule of Law as political…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInternational Business and FDI · Energy, Environment, Economic Growth · Global trade and economics
