Cover image for Foreign Direct Investment in Central Europe and Differences in Transition between post-communist Central European Economies.
Foreign Direct Investment in Central Europe and Differences in Transition between post-communist Central European Economies.
Title:
Foreign Direct Investment in Central Europe and Differences in Transition between post-communist Central European Economies.
Author:
Angenendt, Jan.
ISBN:
9783842808966
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (61 pages)
Contents:
Foreign Direct Investment in Central Europe and Differences in Transition between post-communist Central European Economies -- Contents -- 1. Introduction -- 2. Historical Background -- 3. Methodology -- 3.1. Location Decisions and Economic Theory -- 3.2. Nested and Conditional Logit -- 3.3. Dataset -- 3.3.1. Primary Data -- 3.3.2. Secondary Data -- 4. Hypotheses -- 5. Empirical Results -- 5.1. Whole Sample -- 5.1.1. Nesting structures -- 5.1.2. Results -- 5.2. Firmsize -- 5.3. Industrial Sectors -- 5.4. Investing Countries -- 5.5. Change over time -- 6. Conclusion -- 6.1. General findings -- 6.2. Policy Implications -- Appendix -- Appendix A. Further results -- Appendix B. Derivation of equations -- Appendix C. Derivation of the Nested Logit Model -- Appendix D. The IWH-FDI basic population -- References -- List of Figures.
Abstract:
The transition process from a centrally planned to a market economy followed a very different path in East Germany compared to all other former communist countries. The German Democratic Republic acceded the Federal Republic of Germany in 1990, while other former socialist countries in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) had to start from square one after becoming independent from the USSR. In contrast to other post-soviet countries, East Germany subsequently received massive transfers from the Western part of the country. A significant part of these transfers was invested into infrastructure improvement, while a larger share was spent for consumption, raising the purchasing power in the East of Germany, allowing it to sustain a higher wage level and living standard than would have been economically possible without aid from the West. Twenty years after the breakdown of the iron curtain and the reunification of Germany, the infrastructure in the Eastern part of the country is en par with the West. The East German wage level remains only slightly lower than the Western level (as does productivity), but is significantly higher than in neighbouring post-communist CEE-countries. Because of these differences in economic transition, it can be expected that East Germany attracts a different kind of foreign direct investment compared to other CEE-countries. The objective of this dissertation is to empirically identify the factors affecting foreign direct investment into the region and to discuss the implications of the empirical findings for regional and national economic policy. The "region" is represented in this book by East Germany and three of its Central-European neighbour-countries, the Czech Republic, Poland and Hungary.   Biographische Informationen Jan Angenendt, born in 1985, studied MSc Economics at the University of Warwick.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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