Have BITs driven FDI between ECOWAS countries and EU?

被引:10
作者
Bankole, Abiodun [1 ]
Adewuyi, Adeolu [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ibadan, Dept Econ, Trade Policy Res & Training Programme, Ibadan, Nigeria
关键词
European Union; West Africa; International economic policies; International investments; Bilateral investment treaties; Foreign direct investment; ECOWAS countries; Panel data estimation; Economic partnership agreement;
D O I
10.1108/JITLP-Apr-2012-0008
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Purpose - Given the inconclusive evidence in the literature on the impact of Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs) on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) flows, as well as dearth of literature on this subject matter as regards West Africa and the European Union (EU), the purpose of this paper is to investigate the extent to which BITs and preferential trade and investment agreements (PTIAs) triggered foreign investment flows particularly between the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) countries and the EU. Design/methodology/approach - Trend analysis was used to trace the link between FDI and BITs, while panel regression models were used to investigate the impact of BITs on FDI during 1980-2010. Findings - Econometric results indicate that, as in most previous studies, BITs have strong positive impact on FDI in West Africa, with this impact significant at a higher level (1 per cent) for FDI flow than stock (5 per cent). The impact of BITs on FDI is significant even with the state of internal factors (such as capital account liberalisation, trade openness, high inflation rate and poor governance) in West African countries. The findings suggest that in the absence of BITs, West African countries would have suffered adversely from poor FDI inflows given their poor macroeconomic stability and governance. On the contrary, the PTIAs did not have significant impact on both FDI flows and stock. The results also show that FDI inflow to West Africa is both market and resources seeking. Research limitations/implications - Sensitivity analysis may not have been sufficient. For instance, not tested was the impact of the signalling effect of BIT, as well as other vertical FDI such as those from the USA. Practical implications - The implication of the findings is that West Africa countries need to design policies and programmes that will enable them to maximise the technological spill-over from FDI in order not to be perpetual suppliers of primary products and purchasers of manufactured goods. Further, they have to maintain macroeconomic stability and good governance. They need to understand the type of provisions in the BITs that constituent states signed and compare with the provisions of the PTIAs, with a view to discerning what is responsible for the superior response of FDI to BITs. Originality/value - Given the absence of literature on the impact of BITs on FDI flows between West Africa and EU, it becomes imperative to investigate this issue with a view to motivating the investment component of the EPA, as investment is one of the Singapore issues that were removed from WTO's Doha Round.
引用
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页码:130 / 153
页数:24
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