The Effect of Home-country and Host-country Corruption on Foreign Direct InvestmentReview of Development Economics
This article is included in a special issue of the journal which includes 11 articles focused on informality.
Abstract: The effect of corruption on FDI is analysed. Using FDI outflows from a sample of East European transition economies that had virtually no outward FDI before 1995, FDI flows are observed based mainly on current investment decisions and less on the inertia of past investments. The model separates the effects of corruption on FDI location decisions and on the amount invested. A linear and negative relationship is found between host-country corruption and the likelihood of MNCs locating in that country. The relationship between home-country corruption and FDI is non-monotonic, with an inverse U shape where both high and low levels of corruption in the home country reducing the probability of outward FDI flows. If FDI is undertaken to a host country, the volume of FDI is affected by home-country but not by host-country corruption.
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