1997
DOI: 10.1177/002795019716000107
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Regional Economic Integration and Foreign Direct Investment: The Case of German Investment in Europe

Abstract: The European Economic Community originally came into existence following the Treaty of Rome in 1957. Member states planned to harmonise their tariffs, pursue a common trade policy and liberalise intra-Community trade. All internal customs duties and quantitative restrictions on trade were successfully removed by 1968. However it subsequently became clear that this had not resulted in the full integration of product markets in Europe, with capital movements and trade continuing to be restricted by capital contr… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…The above determinants are also tested by Jost (1997), Martin andVelázquez (1997), Pain andLansbury (1997) and Wheeler and Mody (1992). In Jost's model for Germany, relative GDP and unit labour costs account for around 70% of changes in Germany's share of outflows from 14 OECD countries.…”
Section: Principal Determinants Of Fdismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The above determinants are also tested by Jost (1997), Martin andVelázquez (1997), Pain andLansbury (1997) and Wheeler and Mody (1992). In Jost's model for Germany, relative GDP and unit labour costs account for around 70% of changes in Germany's share of outflows from 14 OECD countries.…”
Section: Principal Determinants Of Fdismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Focusing on inter-regional FDI, Pain and Lansbury (1997) also argue that German investment in the EU has, on average across sectors and countries, been higher since 1987 than might otherwise have been expected, although there is evidence of considerable variation across countries. 9 In a related study, Pain (1997) focuses on the determinants of intra-EU FDI from the United Kingdom.…”
Section: Empirical Evidencementioning
confidence: 98%
“…The upsurge in Japanese investment in Europe has attracted recent attention and the conclusion seems to be that those investments have increased as a consequence of the 1992 program in response to both the opportunities and threats created by the integration process (Thomsen andNicholaides, 1991, andBalasubramauyam andGreenaway, 1992). More recently, Pain and Lansbury (1997) cite some evidence that the Internal Market process of the EU may have diverted investment into the EU at the expense of other locations. Specifically, the level of inward investment in Europe by U.S. and Japanese firms has been significantly higher since 1987 than might otherwise have been expected.…”
Section: Empirical Evidencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A number of empirical approaches examined the total stock and flow of FDI in accordance with the market-size and efficiency-gains hypothesis (Brenton, 1996;Clegg, 1999;Dunning, 1997b;Pain & Lansbury, 1997). Nevertheless, existing empirical studies mainly focused on US and Japanese FDI in the European Union (EU).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%