Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with Vietnam

Abstract Foreign direct investment (FDI) is expected to generate external effects—usually termed FDI spillovers—for a host country, and these spillovers are thought to have consequences on the productivity of domestic firms. Despite this strong expectation, the empirical findings on FDI spillover ar...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Md Arif-Ur-Rahman, Kazuo Inaba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-09-01
Series:Journal of Economic Structures
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40008-021-00248-2
id doaj-fa5dbbe7c77a44029c201ff39b8c8b8e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-fa5dbbe7c77a44029c201ff39b8c8b8e2021-09-19T11:22:46ZengSpringerOpenJournal of Economic Structures2193-24092021-09-0110112310.1186/s40008-021-00248-2Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with VietnamMd Arif-Ur-Rahman0Kazuo Inaba1Graduate School of Economics, Ritsumeikan UniversityGraduate School of Economics, Ritsumeikan UniversityAbstract Foreign direct investment (FDI) is expected to generate external effects—usually termed FDI spillovers—for a host country, and these spillovers are thought to have consequences on the productivity of domestic firms. Despite this strong expectation, the empirical findings on FDI spillover are still indecisive. This study examines firm-level panel data to determine the effects of FDI spillover on firms’ productivity in Bangladesh in comparison to Vietnam. We consider both the horizontal and vertical (backward and forward) spillover effects of FDI. We find evidence that Bangladeshi firms gain productivity improvement through intra-industry or horizontal linkages, whereas Vietnamese firms gain through backward linkages. Our findings suggest that increases in foreign presence in the same industry for Bangladesh and in downstream industries for Vietnam are related with increase in output of domestic firms.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40008-021-00248-2Foreign direct investmentsHorizontal spilloverVertical spilloverBangladeshVietnam
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Md Arif-Ur-Rahman
Kazuo Inaba
spellingShingle Md Arif-Ur-Rahman
Kazuo Inaba
Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with Vietnam
Journal of Economic Structures
Foreign direct investments
Horizontal spillover
Vertical spillover
Bangladesh
Vietnam
author_facet Md Arif-Ur-Rahman
Kazuo Inaba
author_sort Md Arif-Ur-Rahman
title Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with Vietnam
title_short Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with Vietnam
title_full Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with Vietnam
title_fullStr Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed Foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of Bangladesh in comparison with Vietnam
title_sort foreign direct investment and productivity spillovers: a firm-level analysis of bangladesh in comparison with vietnam
publisher SpringerOpen
series Journal of Economic Structures
issn 2193-2409
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract Foreign direct investment (FDI) is expected to generate external effects—usually termed FDI spillovers—for a host country, and these spillovers are thought to have consequences on the productivity of domestic firms. Despite this strong expectation, the empirical findings on FDI spillover are still indecisive. This study examines firm-level panel data to determine the effects of FDI spillover on firms’ productivity in Bangladesh in comparison to Vietnam. We consider both the horizontal and vertical (backward and forward) spillover effects of FDI. We find evidence that Bangladeshi firms gain productivity improvement through intra-industry or horizontal linkages, whereas Vietnamese firms gain through backward linkages. Our findings suggest that increases in foreign presence in the same industry for Bangladesh and in downstream industries for Vietnam are related with increase in output of domestic firms.
topic Foreign direct investments
Horizontal spillover
Vertical spillover
Bangladesh
Vietnam
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40008-021-00248-2
work_keys_str_mv AT mdarifurrahman foreigndirectinvestmentandproductivityspilloversafirmlevelanalysisofbangladeshincomparisonwithvietnam
AT kazuoinaba foreigndirectinvestmentandproductivityspilloversafirmlevelanalysisofbangladeshincomparisonwithvietnam
_version_ 1717375827862093824