Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to page footer

Journal Article

Aid, Infrastructure, and FDI: Assessing the Transmission Channel with a New Index of Infrastructure

World Development, 78: 230-245

Authors

  • Donaubauer
  • J.
  • Meyer
  • B.
  • Nunnenkamp
  • P.

Publication Date

DOI

10.1016/j.worlddev.2015.10.015

JEL Classification

F21 F35 O18

Key Words

aid effectiveness

ausländische Direktinvestitionen

foreign direct investment

infrastructure

Infrastruktur

Sector-specific aid

Related Topics

Foreign Direct Investments

Emerging Markets & Developing Countries

Official development assistance (ODA) and foreign direct investment (FDI) are widely perceived to be alternative means of supplementing domestic savings and promoting economic development in low and middle income countries. However, possible complementarities of aid and FDI have received limited attention so far. It remains open to debate whether aid could render recipient countries more attractive to FDI by removing. In this paper, we address this gap in the literature by analyzing whether aid meant to improve the recipient countries’ economic infrastructure helps remove specific bottlenecks that prevent higher FDI inflows. In particular, we raise the hypothesis that aid specifically targeted at economic infrastructure helps developing countries attract higher FDI inflows through improving their endowment with infrastructure in transportation, communication, energy and finance. By performing 3SLS estimations we explicitly account for dependencies between three structural equations on the allocation of sector-specific aid, the determinants of infrastructure, and the determinants of FDI. We find strong and robust evidence that aid in infrastructure is effective in improving the recipient countries’ endowment with infrastructure. In sharp contrast, other aid is not effective in improving infrastructure. Infrastructure consistently proves to be an important determinant of developing countries’ attractiveness to FDI. Consequently, only that targeted aid promotes FDI indirectly through the infrastructure channel. In addition, aid in infrastructure hasappears to have direct effects on FDI. It appearsThus, it seems that foreign investors anticipate longer-term effects of aid on the country’s endowment with infrastructure and expect aid-financed infrastructure to serve them particularly well.

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

  • View over cargo ship deck with containers

    International Trade

Research Center

  • International Development

  • Trade