New voices in investment : a survey of investors from emerging countries için kapak resmi
Başlık:
New voices in investment : a survey of investors from emerging countries
Yazar:
Mera, Laura Gomez. author
ISBN:
9781464803710

9781464803727
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
89 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Seri:
World Bank Study.
İçerik:
Front Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- About the Authors -- Executive Summary -- Abbreviations -- Chapter 1 Introduction -- Context and Rationale -- Methodology -- Scope -- Analytical Framework -- Note -- Chapter 2 Literature Review -- Drivers and Motives -- Obstacles -- Notes -- Chapter 3 Survey Results -- Introduction -- Survey Respondents -- Characteristics of Investors -- Destinations -- Drivers and Motives -- Obstacles to Investment -- Market Size Versus Cultural and Geographical Barriers -- Results -- The Role of IPAs -- The Role of International Economic Agreements -- Notes -- Chapter 4 Conclusions -- Main Findings -- Implications -- Note -- Appendix A -- Bibliography -- Boxes -- Figures -- Tables -- Back Cover.
Özet:
One out of every three dollars invested abroad in 2012 was originated in multinationals from developing countries. This study sheds light on the characteristics, motivations, strategies, and needs of emerging market investors. By including information on investors, potential investors, and non-investors, the study identifies differentiating factors among them that are associated with investment decisions. Results show that emerging market investors are active players in international trade markets; they operate predominantly in manufacturing, and are publicly listed and larger than non-investors. They exhibit a strong regional bias: they invest more heavily in neighbors and in other countries in their own regions. Outward FDI from emerging markets is primarily market-seeking. Expanding regional and host markets emerged as the most important factor influencing the location of investments. However, emerging markets' firms face binding costs of investing in distant, culturally dissimilar markets, resulting, in practice in a trade-off between market size and market familiarity. Transaction costs associated with geographical and cultural differences have a greater impact on services sector firms that exhibit a stronger regional bias. Bilateral investment treaties (BITs) partly offset these costs associated with investing in faraway and/or unfamiliar markets. In addition, international trade agreements increase the perceived attractiveness of a host country to potential investors. Political factors constitute binding constraints that deter emerging markets' firms from investing in developing markets. Yet, investors value political stability and transparency more than corruption control, fair and regular elections, and risk of expropriation in the host country. IPAs play only a marginal role in raising awareness of investment opportunities in developing
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Kitap EKOBKN0005339 332.673091724 MER 2015
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