Make PattayaMail.com your Homepage | Bookmark              SERVING THE EASTERN SEABOARD OF THAILAND             Pattaya Blatt | Chiang Mai Mail | Pattaya Mail TV
 
Pattaya Mail Web
 
TRAVEL & TOURISM
 

Why foreign investment hurts

by Dr. Bharat Jhunjhunwala

The ASEAN economic ministers are exceedingly concerned about the increasing competition from China and India for attracting foreign investment. They have mooted the idea of establishing an ASEAN investment area to maintain these inflows of capital. Why is it, though, that they need to attract foreign investment continually? Will they never break out of such dependence on foreign capital inflows? Has foreign investment proven to be a short run boon but a long run curse for them?
There indeed may be a reason why they are worried. Economic theory tells us that foreign investment leads to increased investment only as long as it continues to flow in. Once the inflow ceases, the investment thereafter is reduced. In the long run, therefore, foreign investment hurts.
The reason is that the pie that is available in the long term actually shrinks in the period of foreign inflows.
Let us think of the total investment in terms of two pies, those of the foreign and domestic investors. The foreign investors may decide to shift from reinvestment to repatriation any day. This is the short run pie. The domestic investors pie, on the other hand, goes on ever increasing. Restrictions on capital convertibility or preferences of domicile ensure that their profits continue to be reinvested in the domestic economy. This is the long term pie.
As foreign investment flows in, the total availability of capital in the host economy increases. The law of diminishing returns tells us that the rate of return on capital would decline correspondingly. Thus, the domestic pie grows at a slower pace than it would have grown without foreign investment.
Once the foreign investors start repatriating their profits, the investment comes only from the domestic pie. This pie is now smaller than it could have been. So is the long term investment. Foreign capital flows did lead to a short run gain but caused loss of investment and growth in the long run.
This is not a hypothetical scenario. As of now, there is not one major country in the world which has been able to maintain its growth rate after foreign investors have withdrawn.
The experience of countries that had attracted high foreign investment in the seventies shows exactly this. Colombia, Guatemala, Ecuador and Mexico are four countries which had received foreign investment in excess of 1% of the GDP in the seventies but failed to attract more of the same in the eighties. The growth rates of all four were negative in the eighties—between (-)3.3% and (-)4.3%.
Even among the countries which continued to attract high levels of foreign investment in the eighties, Sri Lanka, Argentina, and Brazil, had negligible or negative growth rates at 0.2%, (-)2.4%, and (-)4.8% respectively. The increase in the investment pie due to foreign investment was more than wiped out by the contraction of the domestic pie.
Only Chile, Thailand and Malaysia continued to attract high levels of foreign investment and were able to maintain positive growth rates. The real test for these countries is yet to come. We have to wait and watch what happens after the foreign investors withdraw.
The ASEAN countries would do well to learn the lesson early. By continually running after foreign investment, they may be impairing their chances of maintaining high growth rates in the long run. Proposals such as the ASEAN Investment Area are only a short run palliative which may only worsen their situation in the long run. They should, instead, examine ways of further enlarging their domestic investment pie.
Author is a political economist and writer


Bangkok Airways announces new schedule

Press Release: Bangkok Airways has instituted a new flight program to see to the needs of increased tourism during the cool season.
The new winter schedule will go into effect on October 27, 1996, and will run until March 29, 1997. Bangkok Airways will operate 15 flights a day on the Bangkok-Samui-Bangkok route. The Samui-Phuket-Samui route will run twice daily.
The airline will also operate a daily flight on the Bangkok-Sukhothai-Bangkok route, Sukhothai-Chiang Mai-Sukhothai route, Bangkok-Hua Hin-Bangkok route, Bangkok-Ranong-Bangkok route, and Utapao-Samui-Utapao route.
For further information about flight times, contact your local travel agent or call Bangkok Airways on Tel. (02) 229-3456-63.


HEADLINES [click on headline to view story]

Why foreign investment hurts

Bangkok Airways announces new schedule