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Foreign Direct Investment and Income Inequality in Mexico, 1990–2000
by
Rosas, Guillermo
, Jensen, Nathan M.
in
Bias
/ Capital flow
/ Data analysis
/ Economic models
/ Empirical research
/ Financial support
/ Foreign direct investment
/ Foreign direct investments
/ Foreign Investment
/ Free trade
/ Globalization
/ Income distribution
/ Income Inequality
/ Investment income
/ Investments
/ Liberalization
/ Mexico
/ Multinational Corporations
/ Multinational enterprises
/ Public finance
/ Public policy
/ Skilled labor
/ Wages
2007
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Foreign Direct Investment and Income Inequality in Mexico, 1990–2000
by
Rosas, Guillermo
, Jensen, Nathan M.
in
Bias
/ Capital flow
/ Data analysis
/ Economic models
/ Empirical research
/ Financial support
/ Foreign direct investment
/ Foreign direct investments
/ Foreign Investment
/ Free trade
/ Globalization
/ Income distribution
/ Income Inequality
/ Investment income
/ Investments
/ Liberalization
/ Mexico
/ Multinational Corporations
/ Multinational enterprises
/ Public finance
/ Public policy
/ Skilled labor
/ Wages
2007
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Do you wish to request the book?
Foreign Direct Investment and Income Inequality in Mexico, 1990–2000
by
Rosas, Guillermo
, Jensen, Nathan M.
in
Bias
/ Capital flow
/ Data analysis
/ Economic models
/ Empirical research
/ Financial support
/ Foreign direct investment
/ Foreign direct investments
/ Foreign Investment
/ Free trade
/ Globalization
/ Income distribution
/ Income Inequality
/ Investment income
/ Investments
/ Liberalization
/ Mexico
/ Multinational Corporations
/ Multinational enterprises
/ Public finance
/ Public policy
/ Skilled labor
/ Wages
2007
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Foreign Direct Investment and Income Inequality in Mexico, 1990–2000
Journal Article
Foreign Direct Investment and Income Inequality in Mexico, 1990–2000
2007
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Overview
In this article we explore the relationship between the investments of
multinational corporations (foreign direct investment) and income
inequality in Mexico. We argue that Mexico's liberalization of
foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows in the 1990s provides a natural
experiment to test how FDI affects income inequality in a middle-income
country. We use an instrumental variables approach as our identification
strategy to mitigate problems of endogeneity and omitted variable bias. In
an empirical test of the determinants of changes in income inequality from
1990 to 2000, we find that increased FDI inflows are associated with a
decrease in income inequality within Mexico's thirty-two states.The authors would like to thank Lawrence Broz,
John Freeman, Matt Gabel, Geoff Garrett, Quan Li, Eddy Malesky, Layna
Mosley, Katie Ridgeway, Pablo Pinto, John Stringer, and Andy Sobel for
comments and suggestions. Jacob Gerber and Mariana Medina provided
excellent research assistance. Thanks also to Patricio Aroca Gonzalez for
generously providing us with his data. We acknowledge the financial
support of the Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government, and Public
Policy. Nate Jensen's contribution to this article was written as a
Global Fellow at UCLA's International Institute.
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