Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7365168 Journal of International Money and Finance 2018 52 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper examines the joint effect of imports and inward foreign direct investment (iFDI), the two primary entry forms of foreign companies to the U.S. product market, on domestic firms' capital investment decisions. We develop novel firm-level measures to gauge the impact of imports and iFDI. We show that increased import competition significantly reduces U.S. firms' investment; in contrast, the effect of iFDI on investment is largely nonsignificant. Further analysis suggests that the negative effect of imports on investment is due to competition-induced decline in cash flows. And the nonsignificant result for iFDI can be partly attributed to technology spillovers generated by foreign multinational's U.S. productions, which promote U.S. local firms' innovation capacity and consequently offset the negative effect of foreign competition on investment. Overall, our results indicate that foreign competition plays a key role in shaping corporate investment policy and highlight the distinct implications of imports and iFDI on firm investment.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
Authors
, , ,