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When BITs have some bite: The political-economic environment for bilateral investment treaties
by
Tobin, Jennifer L.
, Rose-Ackerman, Susan
in
Analysis
/ Capital
/ Capital movement
/ Competition
/ Developing countries
/ Economics
/ Emerging markets
/ Environment
/ Foreign investment
/ Foreign investments
/ Hypotheses
/ International organization
/ International organizations
/ International trade
/ Investments
/ Investors
/ LDCs
/ Low income groups
/ Political risk
/ Political Science
/ Politics
/ Sanctions
/ Social Sciences
/ Studies
/ Trade agreements
/ Treaties
2011
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When BITs have some bite: The political-economic environment for bilateral investment treaties
by
Tobin, Jennifer L.
, Rose-Ackerman, Susan
in
Analysis
/ Capital
/ Capital movement
/ Competition
/ Developing countries
/ Economics
/ Emerging markets
/ Environment
/ Foreign investment
/ Foreign investments
/ Hypotheses
/ International organization
/ International organizations
/ International trade
/ Investments
/ Investors
/ LDCs
/ Low income groups
/ Political risk
/ Political Science
/ Politics
/ Sanctions
/ Social Sciences
/ Studies
/ Trade agreements
/ Treaties
2011
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Do you wish to request the book?
When BITs have some bite: The political-economic environment for bilateral investment treaties
by
Tobin, Jennifer L.
, Rose-Ackerman, Susan
in
Analysis
/ Capital
/ Capital movement
/ Competition
/ Developing countries
/ Economics
/ Emerging markets
/ Environment
/ Foreign investment
/ Foreign investments
/ Hypotheses
/ International organization
/ International organizations
/ International trade
/ Investments
/ Investors
/ LDCs
/ Low income groups
/ Political risk
/ Political Science
/ Politics
/ Sanctions
/ Social Sciences
/ Studies
/ Trade agreements
/ Treaties
2011
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When BITs have some bite: The political-economic environment for bilateral investment treaties
Journal Article
When BITs have some bite: The political-economic environment for bilateral investment treaties
2011
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Overview
Political risk frequently impedes the flow of capital into developing countries. In response, governments often adopt innovative institutions that aim to attract greater flows of international investment and trade by changing the institutional environment and limiting the risk to outside investors. One primary example of this is the Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT), aimed specifically at increasing the flow of foreign direct investment (FDI) to developing countries. Yet the literature in political science and economics is inconclusive about whether or not BITs do indeed stimulate FDI, and it provides conflicting theoretical reasoning for the claimed connection. This article argues that BITs do attract FDI to developing countries, but the story is a complicated one. Two important factors must be taken into account. First, BITs cannot entirely substitute for an otherwise weak investment environment. Countries must have the necessary domestic institutions in place that interact with BITs to make these international commitments credible and valuable to investors. Second, as the coverage of BITs increases, overall FDI flows to developing countries increase. However, although remaining positive, the marginal effect of a country’s BITs on its own FDI may fall because of heightened competition for FDI from other BIT countries. Using data from 97 countries for 1984–2007, we provide empirical evidence consistent with both of these theoretical claims.
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