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학술저널

Effects of Corruption on FDI Inflow in Asian Economies

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This study offers fresh insights on and investigates the effects of corruption on foreign direct investment (FDI) inflow from 1995 to 2009 in 16 Asian economies. The empirical result suggests that a 1 percent increase in corruption level triggers an approximately 9.1 percentage point decrease in FDI inflow. Thus, some of the arguments that corruption does not keep FDI out of corrupt countries are either flawed or invalid. The results of this study suggest that some of the countries characterized by a high level of corruption but have remarkable FDI inflows could even double their inward FDIs if they manage to reduce the present pervasive level of corruption.

Abstract

Ⅰ. Introduction

Ⅱ. The Nexus of Corruption and FDI Inflow: Theory, Empirics, and Conflicting Views

Ⅲ. Other Important Factors Influencing FDI Inflow

Ⅳ. Main Objectives of the Study

Ⅴ. Data and Stylized Facts

Ⅵ. The Level of Corruption and FDI Inflow in Asian Economies: Descriptive Statistics

Ⅶ. The Correlation between FDI Inflow and the Independent Variables

Ⅷ. Research Methodology

Ⅸ. Regression Results and Main Findings

Ⅹ. Concluding Remarks

XI. Limitations of the Study and Avenues for Future Research

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