Corruption, formal institutions, and foreign direct investment: The case of OECD countries in Africa

IF 2.2 Q3 BUSINESS Thunderbird International Business Review Pub Date : 2023-07-04 DOI:10.1002/tie.22361
Salman Bahoo, Ilan Alon, Josanco Floreani, Marco Cucculelli
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Purpose

Corruption has shown a mixed impact on foreign direct investment (FDI). This study proposed moderating the role of two—foreign aid (international institution) from the home country and democracy (national institution) in the host country—between corruption-FDI nexus.

Methodology

The framework is analyzed using panel data analysis (2001–2018) of bilateral foreign aid and FDI from 18 European members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) to 34 African countries.

Findings

The presents several key findings. First, Africa's level of government corruption harms bilateral FDI from Europe. Second, the OECD's bilateral foreign aid moderates the negative effects of Africa's host-country corruption on FDI. Third, the level of democracy in the host country also moderates the negative impact of corruption on FDI. Finally, foreign aid strongly moderates the negative effect of corruption on FDI in democratic countries compared to non-democratic host countries.

Research Implications

This study provides the institutional analysis that bilateral foreign aid and democracy as formal institutions affect the European multinational enterprises's decision to invest in Africa.

Practical Implications

It presents the policy and managerial implications. First, European MNEs managers avoid investing in Africa, and governments must take strict actions to attract FDI. Second, foreign aid and democracy motivate MNEs to invest in Africa. Finally, the OECD policymaker could formulate rigorous and relevant conditions for foreign aid to Africa to reduce corruption.

Originality/Value

Through the lens of institutional theory and selectorate theory, the novel institutional role of foreign aid and democracy is proposed and tested between the nexus of corruption-FDI.

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腐败、正式制度和外国直接投资:经合组织国家在非洲的案例
腐败对外国直接投资的影响好坏参半。本研究提出了调节来自母国的外援(国际机构)和东道国的民主(国家机构)在腐败与外国直接投资关系之间的作用。该框架采用面板数据分析(2001-2018年)对经济合作与发展组织(OECD) 18个欧洲成员国对34个非洲国家的双边外援和外国直接投资进行分析。提出了几个关键的发现。首先,非洲的政府腐败程度损害了来自欧洲的双边外国直接投资。其次,经合组织的双边外援缓和了非洲东道国腐败对外国直接投资的负面影响。第三,东道国的民主水平也会缓和腐败对FDI的负面影响。最后,与非民主东道国相比,外国援助强烈地缓和了腐败对民主国家外国直接投资的负面影响。本研究提供了双边外援和民主作为正式制度影响欧洲跨国企业在非洲投资决策的制度分析。它提出了政策和管理意义。首先,欧洲跨国公司管理人员避免在非洲投资,各国政府必须采取严格措施吸引外国直接投资。其次,外国援助和民主促使跨国公司在非洲投资。最后,经合组织的政策制定者可以为向非洲提供援助制定严格和相关的条件,以减少腐败。通过制度理论和选择理论的视角,在腐败与外国直接投资的关系中,提出并检验了外援与民主的新型制度作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
9.10%
发文量
73
期刊介绍: Thunderbird International Business Review is a peer-reviewed journal that is published six times a year in cooperation with the Thunderbird School of Global Business Management, the world"s leading institution in the education of global managers. The journal"s aim is to advance and disseminate research in the field of international business. Its main target audience includes academicians and executives in business and government who have an interest in international business.
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