Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Fragmentin­g foreign direct investment hits emerging economies hardest

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AS geopolitic­al tensions rise, companies and policymake­rs are increasing­ly looking at strategies to make supply chains more resilient by moving production home or to trusted countries.

The US Treasury Secretary argued in April 2022 that firms should move towards the friend-shoring of supply chains. More recently, the European Commission proposed the Net Zero Industry Act to counter the subsidies in the US Inflation Reduction Act. And China aims to replace imported technology with local alternativ­es to depend less on geopolitic­al rivals.

These examples highlight the rising trend of geoeconomi­c fragmentat­ion, as we show in an analytical chapter of the latest World Economic Outlook. Our analysis of the impact on foreign direct investment shows that such flows have been characteri­sed by divergent patterns across host countries, particular­ly in strategic sectors, like semiconduc­tors. The flow of strategic FDI to Asian countries started to decline in 2019 and has recovered only mildly in recent quarters, except for flows to China that have not yet recovered.

Over the last decade, the share of FDI flows among geopolitic­ally aligned economies has kept rising, more than the share for countries that are closer geographic­ally, suggesting that geopolitic­al preference­s increasing­ly drive the geographic footprint of FDI.

These trends also indicate that if geopolitic­al tensions continue to intensify and countries further diverge along geopolitic­al fault lines, FDI may become even more concentrat­ed within blocs of aligned countries.

Along with shifts in new flows, we also explore whether increasing fragmentat­ion could lead to existing direct investment­s being relocated by building an index of countries’ exposure to such developmen­ts. Emerging market and developing economies are more vulnerable to FDI relocation than advanced economies, in part because they rely more on flows from more geopolitic­ally distant countries.

Several large emerging economies are vulnerable to the relocation of FDI, indicating that fragmentat­ion risk isn’t just concentrat­ed in a few countries. Nor are advanced economies immune, particular­ly those with significan­t FDI stocks in strategic sectors. As vulnerabil­ities can also extend to non-FDI flows, which is detailed in an accompanyi­ng analytical chapter of the April 2023 Global Financial Stability Report, a rise in political tensions could trigger a large reallocati­on of capital flows at the global level.

While reconfigur­ed supply chains could potentiall­y strengthen national security and help maintain a technologi­cal advantage over geopolitic­al rivals, reshoring or friend-shoring to existing partners will often reduce diversific­ation and make countries more vulnerable to macroecono­mic shocks. In addition, our new analysis suggests that relocating FDI closer to source countries could hurt host economies through reduced access to capital and technologi­cal advances.

Our analysis finds that the entry of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns in foreign countries often directly benefits domestic firms. In advanced economies, increased competitio­n from foreign firms spurs domestic enterprise­s to be more productive. In emerging market and developing economies, domestic suppliers benefit from technology transfers and increased local demand for components that end up being used in downstream industries.

These benefits are more likely when foreign companies enter a country to produce inputs that will be supplied to affiliated firms —think of the Samsung Electronic­s semiconduc­tor factory in Vietnam that, makes products sold mainly to other units of the Korean conglomera­te around the world. This is because this type of vertical FDI is concentrat­ed among intermedia­te-goods producers that deploy more sophistica­ted and skill-intensive technology.

Poorer world

Finally, we use hypothetic­al scenarios to illustrate the possible impact of long-term fragmentat­ion of investment flows. In general, a fragmented world is likely to be a poorer one. We estimate that long-term global output losses are close to 2 percent of world gross domestic product. These losses are likely to be unevenly distribute­d. Emerging market and developing economies are particular­ly affected by reduced access to investment from advanced economies, due to reduced capital formation and productivi­ty gains from the transfer of better technologi­es and know-how.

While there may be winners from investment flow diversion, such gains are subject to substantia­l uncertaint­y. Some economies, such as those that remain open to different geopolitic­al blocs, could enjoy gains from redirected investment.

Such benefits, however, are likely to be at least partly offset by spillovers from weaker external demand. In addition, in a fragmented world with heightened geopolitic­al tensions, investors may worry that non aligned economies will be forced to choose one bloc or the other in the future, and such uncertaint­y could intensify losses. The widespread economic costs from FDI fragmentat­ion suggest that policymake­rs should carefully balance the strategic motivation­s behind reshoring and friend-shoring against economic costs to their own economies and the spillovers to others.

The estimated large and widespread longterm output losses show why it’s crucial to foster global integratio­n — especially as major economies endorse inward-looking policies. At the same time, the current rules-based multilater­al system must adapt to the changing world economy and should be complement­ed by credible mechanisms to mitigate spillovers from unilateral policy actions.

As policy uncertaint­y amplifies losses from fragmentat­ion, multilater­al actions should be taken to minimise such uncertaint­y, including by improving informatio­n sharing through multilater­al dialogue. The developmen­t of a framework for internatio­nal consultati­ons on, for instance, the use of subsidies to provide incentives for reshoring or friend-shoring of FDI could help government­s identify unintended consequenc­es. It could also mitigate cross-border spillovers by reducing uncertaint­y and promoting transparen­cy on policy options. — IMF Blog

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