Does Foreign Investment and Trade Spur Innovation?

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP10757

Authors: Yuriy Gorodnichenko; Jan Svejnar; Katherine Terrell

Abstract: Using large firm-level and industry-level data sets from eighteen countries, we find that foreign direct investment (FDI) and trade have positive spillover effects on product and technology innovation by domestic firms in emerging markets. The FDI effect is more pronounced for firms from advanced economies. However, while we detect the spillover effects with micro data at the firm-level, when we use linkage variables computed from input-output tables at the industry level we find much weaker, and usually insignificant, effects. These patterns are important for policy, suggesting that spillovers are localized to firms engaged directly with multinationals and in trade, rather than affecting all domestic firms in industries with FDI presence.

Keywords: Emerging Markets; FDI; Foreign Competition; Horizontal and Vertical Linkages; Innovation and Spillovers

JEL Codes: F23; M16; O16; P23


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
foreign direct investment (FDI) (F23)innovation (O35)
trade (F19)innovation (O35)
FDI and trade (F23)localized spillover effects on innovation (O36)
share of sales to multinational enterprises (MNEs) (F23)innovation (O35)
FDI and trade (F23)insignificant effects at industry level (L19)

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