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FDI: Source of Sustainable Growth Africa Foreign Investors Survey 2005 2007 Africa Day Symposium Yoshiteru Uramoto Deputy to the Director General United Nations Industrial Development Organization Comparison with Macro level FDI statistics
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FDI: Source of Sustainable Growth Africa Foreign Investors Survey 2005 2007 Africa Day Symposium Yoshiteru Uramoto Deputy to the Director General United Nations Industrial Development Organization
Comparison with Macro level FDI statistics • Survey results suggest that inward investment flows measured by the balance of payments (BoP) of UNCTAD and IMF may understate the actual level of FDI in Africa • The number of foreign affiliates identified by survey was in some cases larger than the population of subsidiaries of TNCs recorded in BoP statistics. • Enterprise level surveys capture smaller units • Some types of investment e.g. re-invested earnings only measurable in surveys
UNIDO African Foreign Investor Surveys • UNIDO has been working with African IPAs since 2000 to improve their capacity to stimulate growth through investment • The surveys measure: • Impact of investment climate on investor perceptions and actions • Impact of investor actions on domestic economy • The scope of the survey is expanding and will cover more than 30 countries
Sample size and response rate • In total 1216 companies participated • The response rate was 35% (3484 companies received a questionnaire)
Purpose of 2005 Survey • Measure investment according to investor groups • Measure Investment other than in extractive industries (especially in Africa) • Assess the relation between business environment and performance Data Analyses: PERFORMANCE IMPACT INVESTOR GROUP INVESTOR PERCEPTION • Local content • Employment growth • Training • Technology transfer • Importance and change of location factors • IPA assessment • Origin • Organizational structure • Market orientation • Sub-sectors • Share structure • Age • Growth • Productivity • Re-investment
Sales and employment structure Sales Employment
Local content Note: Only manufacturing firms
Local expenditures on material and subcontracting (as % of sales) Note: Only manufacturing firms
Inter-Africa investment • South African investors in sample: • Have the highest average investment levels of any source country • Are the most satisfied with the performance of their operations • Spend most per worker on training • Have highest sales growth expectations • Pay the highest wages • Other African investors: • High expenditure on training per worker • High labor productivity • High skill intensity
Key outcomes of the 2005 Survey • Proportion of South-South FDI increasing over time; their perception, performance and decision making characteristics differ from North • Individual investors (FEs) are an important element of FDI in SSA and require new investment promotion strategy • They need and want more investment assistance • Regarded as growth sector by equity funds • Many have regional market orientation • Large differences between Francophone West Africa and Anglophone East Africa (structure, growth, age, etc. reflecting differing investment climate and response) • Dichotomy of jobless growth versus employment generation with limited value creation. • Northern L-TNCs - stagnant employment but high share of skilled labour force • South S-TNCs – labour-intensive industries with fast growth but no human capacity development and low wages
Note: MTN Nigeria was not considered Future investment rate and volume Note: Over the next three years, normalized with 2004 total firm sales
Past and future investment volumes for different sub-sectors Past 3 years Next 3 years 19
Growth Employment Investment • Local supply chain • Training • Technology diffusion • Export • Output growth • Investor satisfaction • Productivity • Market conditions • Local resources • Operational and regulatory impediments Political will Policy Intervention Political will INVESTMENT CLIMATE PERFORMANCE IMPACT INVESTOR PERCEPTIONS Management of FDI-Local economy Priority issues to be addressed Investor support services Intermediary Agencies 20
Investment Monitoring Platform Policy Strategy/services Measure policy impact Calibration Country (Gov. inst.) Transparency Company Benchmark Training Analysis Supplier Sub-contr. Data Survey data Civil society Companies Online tools Investment opportunities Trends Suppliers/buyers partners Support services Enterprise Diagnostic Data Country Data Other Data Sources Financial Institutions RECs & Development partners Growth areas Specific opportunities Technical assistance needs Indicators 21
Thank you. www.unido.org/afripanet Mr. Yoshiteru Uramoto Deputy to UNIDO Director General 23