6 research outputs found

    Foreign Direct Investment in Zimbabwe: The Role of Institutional Factors

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    The purpose of the paper is to examine the impact of property rights on foreign direct investment (FDI) in Zimbabwe for the period 1964-2005. While the macroeconomic determinants of FDI have been analysed to a considerable extent in past empirical work, the role of institutional factors such as the protection of property rights and the efficiency of the legal system has been underexplored. Using a multivariate cointegration framework, the paper employs a newly constructed de jure property rights index for Zimbabwe to determine the impact of property rights on FDI. The empirical evidence shows that property rights are consistently an important explanatory variable of FDI in Zimbabwe, even after controlling for periods when there are no significant new foreign capital inflows. Other significant explanatory variables of FDI in Zimbabwe are the real gross domestic product (GDP), capital intensity, the external debt to GDP ratio, political instability as well as the educational levels.Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Property rights, Cointegration and Zimbabwe

    The Composition of Foreign Capital Stocks in South Africa: The Role of Institutions, Domestic Risk and Neighbourhood Effects

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    This paper investigates the determinants of the absolute volumes and composition of foreign capital stocks in South Africa, focusing on the role played by institutional quality (property rights), domestic risk and neighbourhood effects as potential determinants. The empirical findings show that secure property rights and low risk in the host country positively affect the absolute volumes of both long-term and short-term foreign capital, but tilt the composition of foreign capital in favour of long-term foreign capital. The empirical results also demonstrate the existence of neighbourhood effects where the institutional environment in Zimbabwe has a significant impact on South Africa's foreign capital in.ows. It is shown that weak property rights in Zimbabwe lead to an increase in South Africa's foreign direct investment (FDI), but a reduction in South Africa's portfolio investment. This suggests that Zimbabwe and South Africa compete for foreign direct investment in similar sectors, and present two alternative investment destinations to foreign investors. As such, when property rights in Zimbabwe worsen, FDI appears to switch to South Africa as an alternative. By contrast, poor property rights in Zimbabwe appear to raise the perceived risk for portfolio investment in South Africa.Foreign capital stocks, Composition, FDI, Portfolio Investment and South Africa

    The role of institutions in Shaping foreign capital: Evidence from South Africa and Zimbabwe

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    The purpose of the study is to investigate the impact of institutions (particularly property rights) on foreign capital in two Southern African countries (namely Zimbabwe and South Africa). This is motivated by the recent theoretical emphasis on the role played by institutional factors such as property rights protection and the rule of law in determining economic outcomes. The thesis addresses a critical issue concerning the measurement of institutional variables in empirical work. While the political science and political economy fields have produced several institutional indices, most are time truncated. Most existing indices are therefore only useful in cross-country and panel studies, but not useful for country-specific studies. This limits any path-dependency exploration on the link between institutions and economic outcomes. To address the measurement challenges, a new set of institutional indicators measuring de jure property rights, de jure political freedoms and de facto political instability are constructed for Zimbabwe for the period 1946 to 2005 by this dissertation. The Fedderke et al (2001) Delphi technique used in the construction of the de jure property rights and political freedom indices fits in well with the North (1990) institutional theoretical framework employed here. Making use of the newly constructed property rights index in a multivariate cointegration framework, the study establishes the impact of property rights on foreign direct investment (FDI) in Zimbabwe for the period 1964 to 2005. The empirical results indicate that property rights are consistently an important explanatory variable of FDI, even after controlling for periods when there are no significant new foreign capital inflows. Other significant variables ii that explain FDI in Zimbabwe include the real gross domestic product (GDP), capital intensity, the external debt to GDP ratio, political instability as well as the educational levels. In the case of South Africa, the thesis investigates the impact of property rights, domestic risk and neighbourhood effects on the absolute levels of FDI and portfolio investment stocks as well as the relative share of FDI in total foreign capital stocks. Domestic risk is measured by the South African-American sovereign spread. This risk measure captures both the default and currency risks since the sovereign bonds are denominated in different currencies. Neighbourhood effects are captured by introducing the property rights index for Zimbabwe as an explanatory variable for foreign capital stocks in South Africa. The empirical evidence for South Africa shows that while domestic risk reduces the absolute levels of FDI and portfolio investment, secure property rights positively affect both FDI and portfolio investment. These results are in line with the theoretical proposition of the portfolio diversification literature. In terms of neighbourhood effects, the results indicate that weak property rights in Zimbabwe lead to an increase in the absolute level of FDI stocks but reduce the absolute level of portfolio investment stocks in South Africa. The results suggest that when property rights in Zimbabwe deteriorate, long-term foreign investors may relocate their investment from Zimbabwe to South Africa. However, weak property rights in Zimbabwe have a negative spill-over effect on the short-term portfolio investment flows in South Africa. Regarding the composition of foreign capital stocks in South Africa, the results show that the relative share of FDI in total foreign capital stocks is positively related to property rights but negatively related to domestic risk. This suggests that FDI in South Africa is not inalienable. As such, when property rights weaken or domestic risk goes up, the relative share of FDI in total foreign capital stocks decreases. This occurs because foreign direct investors tend to iii reduce the levels FDI relative to other foreign capital inflows when faced with expropriation risk. The results also show a negative relationship between the property rights index for Zimbabwe and the relative share of FDI in total foreign capital stocks in South Africa. This indicates that deteriorating property rights in Zimbabwe result in an increase in the relative share of FDI in total foreign capital stocks in South Africa. In both the cases of South Africa and Zimbabwe, our empirical results confirm the existence of feedback effects from FDI to output. This supports the notion that FDI has some output-enhancing effects in the host country. Overall, the study shows that property rights, domestic risk and neighbourhood effects in the recipient country are critical in shaping the absolute levels of foreign capital stocks as well as the composition of foreign capital stocks. The main policy recommendation for Zimbabwe and South Africa is that, to increase the levels of foreign capital inflows, the host country governments should ensure sound institutions both at home and in the region. Another recommendation of the study is that, if the South African government wants to shift the composition of its foreign capital stocks from portfolio investment to FDI, they should put in place policies that promote secure property rights and low domestic risk

    Measuring Institutions: The Zimbabwe Case

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    The current, persistent growth problem in Zimbabwe is often attributed to poor economic and political institutional frameworks characterised by insecure property rights and an unreliable rule of law. An empirical test of this hypothesis presents some methodological difficulties. Although political scientists have been constructing measures of social and political dimensions of societies for some time, such measures are not available over sufficiently long time runs to inspire confidence in their usefulness in being able to address the long-run and dynamic questions that arise when linking economic performance and institutions. The aim of the paper is to assemble a new set of political and economic institutional indicators for Zimbabwe covering the period 1946 to 2005. While the new indices span for a significantly long time period, they are highly correlated with existing, widely used institutional indices produced by the Freedom House, the Heritage Foundation and the Fraiser Institute. The new data set will contribute towards understanding the institutional dimension of Zimbabwe’s persistent economic decline.

    Foreign direct investment in Zimbabwe: The role of institutional and macroeconomic factors

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    The purpose of our research is to examine the impact of property rights on foreign direct investment (FDI) in Zimbabwe for the period 1964-2005. While the macroeconomic determinants of FDI have been analysed to a considerable extent in past empirical work, the role of institutional factors such as the protection of property rights and the efficiency of the legal system has been underexplored. Using a multivariate cointegration framework, we use a newly constructed de jure property rights index for Zimbabwe to determine the impact of property rights on FDI. The empirical evidence shows that property rights are consistently an important explanatory variable of FDI in Zimbabwe, even after controlling for periods when there are no significant new foreign capital inflows. Other significant explanatory variables of FDI in Zimbabwe are the real gross domestic product (GDP), capital intensity, the external debt to GDP ratio, political instability as well as the educational levels. The purpose of our research is to examine the impact of property rights on foreign direct investment (FDI) in Zimbabwe for the period 1964-2005. While the macroeconomic determinants of FDI have been analysed to a considerable extent in past empirical work, the role of institutional factors such as the protection of property rights and the efficiency of the legal system has been underexplored. Using a multivariate cointegration framework, we use a newly constructed de jure property rights index for Zimbabwe to determine the impact of property rights on FDI. The empirical evidence shows that property rights are consistently an important explanatory variable of FDI in Zimbabwe, even after controlling for periods when there are no significant new foreign capital inflows. Other significant explanatory variables of FDI in Zimbabwe are the real gross domestic product (GDP), capital intensity, the external debt to GDP ratio, political instability as well as the educational levels
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