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Comments on Alfaro and Chen. Ann Harrison Wharton, University of Pennsylvania and NBER May 2012. Goal of this paper. Does incoming FDI raise productivity in a country because: Incoming MNCS are more productive? Incoming MNCS weed out inefficient domestic firms?
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Comments on Alfaro and Chen Ann Harrison Wharton, University of Pennsylvania and NBER May 2012
Goal of this paper Does incoming FDI raise productivity in a country because: • Incoming MNCS are more productive? • Incoming MNCS weed out inefficient domestic firms? • Incoming MNCs transfer knowledge (“spillovers”) to domestic enterprises?
Answer: all three (MNCs, spillovers, and reallocation play a role)
Truly impressive theory and empirical paper • Alfaro and Chen use heterogeneous trade theory to identify and distinguish between different sources of productivity changes due to MNC entry • Million observations across many countries, years (2002-2007) • Detailed TFP estimation using OP and a number of robustness tests
Some possible concerns • Endogeneity: can the tail wag the dog? • Are there knowledge spillovers or not? • Why don’t policies to encourage FDI help? • Minor issues (magnitude of effect, direction of spillovers)
Usual question about causality: • 1 million observations; 36,000 MNCs, implying 3.6 percent of data • Countries with more MNCs had higher TFP growth • But can the tail wag the dog? Aren’t MNCs just attracted to more dynamic, growing countries and industries?
Clever IV Approach: first stage • Instrument for multinational entry in the host country using productivity of the multinational firm at headquarters. • Other determinants of location of subsidiary include distance (-ive), share a border (positive) and share a language (positive)
But…. • First stage R-square is low in Table 1, suggesting instrument is “weak”. Can we see F-statistics? • Can we see over-identification tests for the validity of the instrument? • Can we see the OLS results without IVs?
Are there knowledge spillovers from foreign investment? • Table 5: yes • Table 10: no • NOT for developing countries • YES for developed but only vertical not horizontal So what are we to conclude?
Why don’t policies to encourage FDI help? • Table 11 suggests that tax incentives and other pro-FDI policies reduce foreign entry • Clearly reflects the fact that incentives tend to be introduced when a country is less attractive to foreign investors • My suggestion: cut this part out and devote a future paper to it once you resolve the reverse causality problem (that less attractive locations offer bigger incentives).
Authors estimate impact of 100 percent increase in probability of MNC entry:
Direction of spillovers • Assumed to move from MNCs to host country firms • Increasingly this assumption is violated, especially for emerging market MNCs, who travel in order to learn from their host country counterparts: • CEMEX learns from Federal Express • Haier learns from US competitors • Emerging market MNCs in Silicon Valley
New evidence for China • China (Du, Harrison, and Jefferson) • Strong vertical (backward) linkages or spillovers, disputing Table 10 • Linkages increase post-WTO entry • Perhaps you used the US input-output tables, and developing country input-output coefficients are different? • More significant knowledge spillovers in subsidized sectors, disputing Table 11, and suggesting Chinese did it right.
New evidence for India: FDI promotes learning but not reallocation Source: Harrison, Martin, and Nataraj, forthcoming
More hard evidence on IP (China) • IP instruments (tax incentives, tariffs, subsidies) work better when there is competition. (joint work with Aghion) • IP instruments work better when targeted at exporting firms (joint work with (Justin Lin) • BUT actual government targeting limited so much scope for improvement.
Concluding Comments • Important work—on both theory and estimation--disentangling the impact of FDI on host countries. • Alfaro and Chen show us how to disentangle impacts on productivity and procompetitive effects of MNCs that weed out weak firms. • Summarizing suggestions: • More tests of validity of instruments • Are there spillovers ? • Do FDI policies help or hurt (cut Table 11) • Direction of spillovers and magnitudes
谢谢你,再见! Thank you, and goodbye!