The effects of economic fracturing are intertwined with broader, longer-term shifts in trade, investment and global value chains. In many respects, the impact of these longer-term trends on foreign direct investment outweighs – at least for now – the impact of fracturing. This column highlights ten transformative trends in foreign direct investment spanning the two decades from 2003 to 2023. Taken together, these trends have far-reaching consequences for international production patterns and for the global value chain-based and FDI-based industrialisation strategies of developing countries.
The trends stemming from technological advances, policy shifts, and the sustainability imperative, along with the effects of the trade tensions starting in late 2017 and the shock of the Covid pandemic, have sparked a debate on the risk of a reversal of economic globalisation (Fajgelbaum et al. 2020, Antràs 2020, Zhan et al. 2020, Kukharskyy et al. 2021, Baldwin 2022a, 2022b, 2022c, 2022d). The subsequent shocks of conflicts and political fragmentation have brought to the fore the heightened pressure towards global economic fracturing and the decoupling of global value chain (GVC) links between the US and other developed economies and the Chinese economy, with implications for many other countries and regions (Campos et al. 2023, Aiyar et al. 2023, Javorcik et al. 2023).
So far, this debate has mainly focused on the trade perspective (Aiyar et al. 2023 is an exception). The objective of this study is to explore the investment angle, offering a comprehensive reference for policymakers and analysts on the main trends reshaping the global FDI landscape amidst global economic fracturing. Given the intertwined nature of trade and FDI in the global production landscape dominated by GVCs, it also aims to build a much-needed bridge between connected narratives in the FDI and trade areas.
The underlying analysis owes credit to, and is directionally consistent with, previous studies investigating specific aspects of the FDI trends, particularly various recent editions of UNCTAD’s World Investment Reports (e.g. UNCTAD 2017, 2020, 2021). However, to date, a fully integrated diagnostic covering both short- and long-term perspectives, as well as the sectoral, geographical, and bilateral dimensions of FDI patterns, has been lacking.
This column highlights ten empirical FDI trends, grouped into three overarching themes: the triple divergence, the rise of economic fracturing and the implications for sustainability and development (UNCTAD 2024). These trends fundamentally alter the development paradigm based on promoting investment in manufacturing and export-led growth, as will be discussed in the concluding part.
Over the past two decades, FDI patterns have adapted to the transformative shifts reshaping economic globalisation in three key aspects.
Figure 1 Diverging FDI trends in manufacturing and services
Number of cross-border greenfield projects, indexed 2003 = 100
Source: UNCTAD, based on information from the Financial Times Ltd, fDi Markets (www.fDimarkets.com).
Note: CAGR: Compound Annual Growth Rate. The sectoral analysis is based on the variable “Business Activity” from fDi Markets. “Manufacturing+” includes “Manufacturing” and “Other non-services” activities. The latter group comprises the following categories: construction, electricity, extraction and infrastructure.
Since the escalation of the trade war – with an acceleration after the outbreak of the pandemic and the recent geopolitical crisis – escalating international tensions are turning divergence into fracturing, leading to the disruption of historical investment patterns. Fracturing is associated with heightened uncertainty and unpredictability in the FDI landscape, and limited possibilities for countries to strategically benefit from diversification (FDI trend #7).
The fracturing process is characterised by the rising importance of geopolitics. Overall, between 2013 and 2022, the share of FDI projects between geopolitically distant countries decreased by 10 percentage points, from 23% to 13% (figure 2). Geopolitical motivations are thus emerging as primary drivers of investment decisions, at times overriding traditional FDI determinants (FDI trend #8).
Figure 2 Declining share of FDI between geopolitically distant countries
Cross-border greenfield projects between geopolitically distant countries as a share of total, per cent
Amid long-term stagnation of manufacturing investment across all industries, the number of cross-border greenfield projects in renewable energy generation (environmental technologies) as well as in the manufacturing of batteries and electric vehicles (EVs) has steadily increased (Figure 3). The sustainability imperative and the drive to stimulate investment in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have opened new opportunities for investment in industrial development (FDI trend #9).
However, these new opportunities can only compensate in part for the lack of FDI growth in other industrial sectors that are critical for GVC development strategies. Historical shifts and economic fracturing are leading to a decrease in the share of FDI in smaller developing countries and least developed countries. This trend exacerbates their marginalisation and vulnerability, as FDI becomes increasingly concentrated in developed and emerging economies (FDI trend #10).
Figure 3 Growth of green FDI
Based on a diagnostic of ten trends in foreign direct investment, in this column we put forward three major implications for developing countries and their development and industrialisation strategies.
Figure 4 The GVC development ladder: Shifting FDI weights
Distribution of cross-border greenfield projects across stages of the GVC-development ladder, per cent
Source : Voxeu
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