2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-124x.2011.01250.x
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A New Look at Chinese FDI in Australia

Abstract: Australia is China's largest destination for FDI, most of it directed to the resource sector. The scale and speed of the surge of Chinese investment into Australia, largely from stateowned enterprises (SOEs), has raised the question of whether investments by SOEs require special scrutiny. In China, the question is about the treatment of Chinese investment compared with investment from other countries. Clearly, Australia has had a policy environment that is very open to foreign investment, including investment … Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…It is because multinational enterprises (MNEs) from developing countries might have different advantages and motivations from those of developed economies. Acta Oeconomica 65 (2015) This might explain why Chinese ODI in Australia and Africa has been a cause of serious concern to local governments (Drysdale 2011;Song 2011). China's ODI could also be motivated by the desire to upgrade the industrial technological ladder through acquiring advanced technologies, better management skills, and stable supplies of raw materials.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is because multinational enterprises (MNEs) from developing countries might have different advantages and motivations from those of developed economies. Acta Oeconomica 65 (2015) This might explain why Chinese ODI in Australia and Africa has been a cause of serious concern to local governments (Drysdale 2011;Song 2011). China's ODI could also be motivated by the desire to upgrade the industrial technological ladder through acquiring advanced technologies, better management skills, and stable supplies of raw materials.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…VIC attracted 33.58% ODI from China, ranking second only to NSW, followed by QLD (9.05%), NT (3.74%), SA (3.58%) and WA (0.76%). By contrast, ACT 6 and TAS attracted zero ODI from China, i.e. these two states did not attract or attracted a very tiny amount of investment from China in 2015 (see Fig.1).…”
Section: Imbalanced Distribution Of Regional and Industrial Investmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some Australian have worried about it that excessive Chinese ODI in Australia and the control of Australian resources resulting from it are likely to let Chinese government indirectly interfere Australian politics. Factors including issues of populism like this and the particular characteristic of Chinese foreign investment ownership (like SOEs' dominance) have constituted "a source of political confusion in Australian policy development and in the Chinese perception of Australian policy" [6].Also, Lou (2014) pointed similar obstacles of trades out [7]. As a consequence, it becomes a realistic issue faced by Chinese government andChinese foreign tradehow to stimulate Chinese non-SOEs to invest abroad in order to balance the ratio of SOEs' participation with that of non-SOEs' participation in foreign trades.…”
Section: Tendency Of Industries and Investing Principals Diversifyingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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