The determinants of FDI in OIC countries

Sulaiman Sajilan, Muhammad Umar Islam, Mohsin Ali, Urooj Anwar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Foreign Direct investment (FDI) is considered to be an important source of capital especially in developing countries. FDI supplements local savings and brings a series of benefits in host countries. This research has focused OIC on countries since these countries are still far behind in attracting FDI compared to other developing countries. OIC member countries inhibit diversity in their resources from resource rich to resource poor countries. They lack behind the developed world in terms of economic development pertaining to weak economies. Since for these types of countries FDI can prove to be a vital source of capital, it becomes important to study the factors that affect it. This study exactly does the same by incorporating a series of determinants (inflation, size of the economy, trade openness, infrastructure, and institutional quality) to assess the impact they have in attracting FDI. We have used data for 42 countries spanning over 1996-2013. The choice of data selection has been dictated by data availability. For estimation we have used panel fixed effects and random effects estimators. Our results indicate that size of economy, infrastructure and trade openness are positively and significantly related in attracting FDI in those countries. Institutions on the other hand are negatively related. The effects of inflation are somewhat mixed according to our estimation and not robust. The implications of our findings are that policy makers should expend efforts in making more trade oriented policies, improve infrastructure and increase the size of economy.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)466-473
Number of pages8
JournalInternational Journal of Financial Research
Volume10
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Foreign direct investment
  • Institutional quality
  • OIC
  • Panel data

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