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Title
Urban Economic Development in China: The Role of Foreign Direct Investment
Fields of Research (FoR) 2008:
Author(s)
Publication Date
2017-04-07
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2008
Abstract
<p>Attracting foreign direct investment (FDI) remains a key developmental strategy that is
prescribed by policy-makers in many developing economies. It rests on the premise that FDI
accelerates economic growth in the host country through both tangible and intangible channels.
In the extant literature, China’s dominance in the world’s vast FDI scene has captured many
researchers’ attention. However, the majority of the existing studies have focused on either the
national or provincial level, leaving the determinants of FDI and its effects on the host city
largely under-explored. An in-depth understanding of the reasons behind the mixed experience
of Chinese cities in hosting FDI provides invaluable input for local officials. With these points
in mind, this thesis is partly designed to bridge the gap in our current understanding by
examining FDI using city-level data from China, and, partly, to provide the Chinese policymakers with an insight into the interactions between FDI and the host city. </p>
<p>A comprehensive panel dataset of 287 prefectural cities in China for the 2001–2012 period
forms the basis of this thesis. Findings from this thesis complement earlier results and offer
important lessons for local development. From a methodological perspective, this thesis
addresses aggregation bias by considering various subsamples based on geographical topology
and city-specific characteristics. Furthermore, it controls potential endogeneity bias by
applying panel instrumental variable (IV) or generalised method-of-moment (GMM)
estimators. </p>
<p>This thesis is organised in a paper-based format and presented in three parts. Part I provides
essential background information that links various facets of this thesis together. Part II
presents the results of the empirical analyses in five distinct, but related, papers that are
delineated by specific research questions and objectives. Part III discusses the main findings
and their policy implications. This final part also lists the limitations of the current research
and offers directions for future research. </p>
<p>The first two papers focus on the city-level determinants of FDI. Specifically, the first paper
investigates the role of soft infrastructure as an attractor of FDI. After capturing the notion of
soft infrastructure by the local banking sector (LBS), it finds a positive association between
LBS development and FDI across Chinese cities. This finding suggests that local governments need to devote their limited resources to improving soft infrastructure, like access to financial
services. Meanwhile, the second paper addresses the effect of capital-city status in attracting
FDI. It finds that, all things being equal, capital cities manage to host more FDI compared to
cities without capital-city status. This finding implies that Chinese policy-makers need to focus their
attention on non-capital cities in order to achieve a balanced growth path within the province.</p>
<p>The remaining three papers apply GMM estimator to study the interactions between FDI and
its host city in China. Paper three investigates whether FDI complements or substitutes for
domestic investment (DI) in the Chinese cities. The analysis shows that a complementary FDI–
DI nexus only exists in the eastern and central cities. This heterogeneous relationship is further
supported by the results in paper four, which attributes the positive FDI–growth nexus in the
eastern cities to soft infrastructure, such as local financial development and human capital, and
in the inland cities to hard infrastructure, like transportation networks. Meanwhile, paper five
finds a unidirectional causality running from FDI to growth in the eastern cities, but a bidirectional causality in the central cities. In general, these findings attest to the argument that
the interactions between FDI and the host economy crucially depend on initial economic
conditions and the local institutional environment. Without taking these city-specific
characteristics into consideration, any attempt to attract and internalise the benefits associated
with FDI is likely to be futile.</p>
<p>Overall, this thesis provides two major contributionsto the FDI literature. First, it demonstrates
that soft infrastructure has played an increasingly important role in influencing the location
choices of foreign investors in China. Second, it highlights the need to study the determinants
and effects of FDI on a smaller geographical scale, particularly in a large country such as China. </p>
prescribed by policy-makers in many developing economies. It rests on the premise that FDI
accelerates economic growth in the host country through both tangible and intangible channels.
In the extant literature, China’s dominance in the world’s vast FDI scene has captured many
researchers’ attention. However, the majority of the existing studies have focused on either the
national or provincial level, leaving the determinants of FDI and its effects on the host city
largely under-explored. An in-depth understanding of the reasons behind the mixed experience
of Chinese cities in hosting FDI provides invaluable input for local officials. With these points
in mind, this thesis is partly designed to bridge the gap in our current understanding by
examining FDI using city-level data from China, and, partly, to provide the Chinese policymakers with an insight into the interactions between FDI and the host city. </p>
<p>A comprehensive panel dataset of 287 prefectural cities in China for the 2001–2012 period
forms the basis of this thesis. Findings from this thesis complement earlier results and offer
important lessons for local development. From a methodological perspective, this thesis
addresses aggregation bias by considering various subsamples based on geographical topology
and city-specific characteristics. Furthermore, it controls potential endogeneity bias by
applying panel instrumental variable (IV) or generalised method-of-moment (GMM)
estimators. </p>
<p>This thesis is organised in a paper-based format and presented in three parts. Part I provides
essential background information that links various facets of this thesis together. Part II
presents the results of the empirical analyses in five distinct, but related, papers that are
delineated by specific research questions and objectives. Part III discusses the main findings
and their policy implications. This final part also lists the limitations of the current research
and offers directions for future research. </p>
<p>The first two papers focus on the city-level determinants of FDI. Specifically, the first paper
investigates the role of soft infrastructure as an attractor of FDI. After capturing the notion of
soft infrastructure by the local banking sector (LBS), it finds a positive association between
LBS development and FDI across Chinese cities. This finding suggests that local governments need to devote their limited resources to improving soft infrastructure, like access to financial
services. Meanwhile, the second paper addresses the effect of capital-city status in attracting
FDI. It finds that, all things being equal, capital cities manage to host more FDI compared to
cities without capital-city status. This finding implies that Chinese policy-makers need to focus their
attention on non-capital cities in order to achieve a balanced growth path within the province.</p>
<p>The remaining three papers apply GMM estimator to study the interactions between FDI and
its host city in China. Paper three investigates whether FDI complements or substitutes for
domestic investment (DI) in the Chinese cities. The analysis shows that a complementary FDI–
DI nexus only exists in the eastern and central cities. This heterogeneous relationship is further
supported by the results in paper four, which attributes the positive FDI–growth nexus in the
eastern cities to soft infrastructure, such as local financial development and human capital, and
in the inland cities to hard infrastructure, like transportation networks. Meanwhile, paper five
finds a unidirectional causality running from FDI to growth in the eastern cities, but a bidirectional causality in the central cities. In general, these findings attest to the argument that
the interactions between FDI and the host economy crucially depend on initial economic
conditions and the local institutional environment. Without taking these city-specific
characteristics into consideration, any attempt to attract and internalise the benefits associated
with FDI is likely to be futile.</p>
<p>Overall, this thesis provides two major contributionsto the FDI literature. First, it demonstrates
that soft infrastructure has played an increasingly important role in influencing the location
choices of foreign investors in China. Second, it highlights the need to study the determinants
and effects of FDI on a smaller geographical scale, particularly in a large country such as China. </p>
Publication Type
Thesis Doctoral
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020
HERDC Category Description
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