Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5086213 Japan and the World Economy 2008 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

Using the implications of the model of investment under uncertainty, this paper provides a systematic examination of the FDI-exchange rate relationship with respect to services taking into account the degree of tradability across services. Services have mainly been addressed in the literature as a sensitivity test by industry using aggregated service data identified as “nonmanufacturing”. Using data on Japanese FDI into 207 U.S. service industries, maximium-likehood estimates reveal that dollar appreciations are positively correlated with service FDI flows into the U.S. This positive correlation is stronger for non-tradable services versus tradable services. For tradable and non-tradable producer services, higher exchange rate uncertainty may lead to fewer FDI occurrences. On average, across all types of services, higher U.S. unit labor costs relative to Japan had a deterrent effect on Japanese service FDI as well. Finally, this paper also provides a useful benchmark to partition services by tradability.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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