1 research outputs found
Chinese FDI Approach in Africa: Engaging with A Voracious Dragon?
China¿s expanded links to Africa have created a discourse of how to characterize those ties.
This paper makes an attempt to uncover the determinants of China¿s outbound foreign direct
investment (OFDI) activities in Africa and to what extent a standard economic model can
account for the observed patterns of Chinese FDI in general. To address motivating questions, I
utilize newer data from 2003-2012 to conduct a formal econometric analysis, present year-byyear
estimates of main driving factors behind China¿s OFDI flows, and employ a ¿gravity
toolkit¿ robustness check approach to analyze the robustness of different specifications. By
using a gravity approach, I also provide a ground for a comparison of investment behaviors of
China versus other 36 large FDI source economies. The results show that China¿s OFDI
patterns exhibit both a conventional and an idiosyncratic dimension. Gravity model, overall, can
explain a large part of Chinese OFDI behaviors. Considerations such as host country market
size and geographic proximity play main role in terms of driving China¿s foreign investment
decisions. However, China is less sensitive to institutional risks and focuses more on natural
resources in host countries. Compared to other home countries, China also significantly targets
Africa as its FDI destination. These distinctive approaches, combining both market economy
and planned economy characteristics, are shaped by China¿s government¿s role, institutional
environment, and domestic economic imperatives