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TAD/INF/PR/36
21/01/02


FDI DOWNTURN IN 2001 TOUCHES ALMOST ALL REGIONS

Foreign direct investment (FDI) flows to developed countries declined by nearly half in 2001, according to updated regional estimates released today by UNCTAD, with flows also down in all developing regions except Africa. Despite the overall decrease in 2001, however, surveys of transnational corporations (TNCs) for the coming three years suggest a limited impact of 11 September on investment plans. The attractiveness of China, especially after its accession to the WTO, is expected to be sustained.

UNCTAD believes that while the 2001 decline is not likely to be recouped this year, it will ultimately be reversed once consumer confidence returns. This is because the key to restoring FDI flows worldwide is economic growth, while the basic factors determining FDI flows – such as the quality of infrastructure, the availability of skills and technological capacity in host countries – remain the same.

UNCTAD had earlier projected a 40% drop in world FDI inflows for last year, down to $760 billion from over $1.3 trillion in 2000 (see TAD/INF/PR21/Rev.1 of 18 September 2001). It attributed the decline mainly to a slowdown of world economic growth (1.3%, as compared with 4.0% in 2000) and to a decrease in cross-border mergers and acquisitions (M&As). The value of cross-border M&As in 2001 stood at barely $600 billion for less than 6,000 deals, vs. $1.1 trillion for some 7,900 deals in 2000(1).

Despite the estimated downturn in 2001, the cross-border investment plans of TNCs for the coming three years have not substantially changed since 11 September, as previously reported by UNCTAD (see TAD/INF/NC27/Rev.1 of 5 December 2001). Major TNCs plan to continue their international expansion, according to a survey of 129 firms undertaken between May and November 2001 by UNCTAD, the Invest in France Agency (Agence Française pour les Investissements Internationaux, or AFII) and Andersen Consulting. The preferred mode of expansion continues to be cross-border M&As in developed countries and greenfield investment in developing countries. The most favoured locations of TNCs for the next three years are the United States, among all developed countries; Germany, the United Kingdom and France, in Western Europe; China in Asia; Brazil in Latin America; Poland in Eastern Europe; and South Africa in Africa. Similarly, up to 72% of the 501 Japanese manufacturing TNCs surveyed in July/August 2001 by the Japan Bank for International Cooperation said they would strengthen and expand their foreign operations, a 55% jump over the previous year. The impact of 11 September on FDI seems to be limited (box 1).

Developed countries

FDI flows to developed countries are estimated to have declined by nearly half in 2001 from the previous record high – from over $1 trillion to $0.5 trillion. Virtually all of the major developed countries experienced a downturn in 2001. Significant decreases were reported for Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg, Denmark, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States (table 1). Germany has again become a relatively small recipient of FDI, after being the second largest in Western Europe in 2000 on account of the Vodaphone AirTouch acquisition of Mannesmann (the largest cross-border acquisition to date). The considerable drop in FDI inflows to the US last year was partly due to the general economic slowdown and the drop in foreign acquisitions of US firms. In the third quarter of 2001 reinvested earnings were negative, the first time since the fourth quarter of 1998. The decline for Japan was smaller, because of large flows through M&As in the telecommunications industry, which accounted for the bulk of cross-border M&As in Japan.

FDI outflows from developed countries also declined (table 2) and are expected to remain at a low level this year. But the drop in cross-border M&As from the European Union is less marked. In particular, those from Germany rose, leading to a significant increase in that country’s FDI outflows; as a result, Germany became the second largest Western European outward investor after France in 2001(2).

While domestic investment shrunk last year in Japan(3) Japanese investment abroad grew, including a $2.3 billion investment in Lucent Technologies in the United States by Furukawa Electric Co. Japanese investment flows to Asia remained steady as the production facilities of various Japanese manufacturing firms were relocated from Japan in consequence of a further domestic restructuring induced by the current recession, particularly in the electric and electronics industries.

Developing countries

FDI flows to developing countries are also estimated by UNCTAD to be down, from $240 billion in 2000 to $225 billion in 2001. FDI declined in all developing regions except Africa.

Flows into Latin America and the Caribbean as a whole dwindled slightly, from $86 billion in 2000 to $80 billion in 2001, driven by a drop in M&As, including privatizations. Since Spain had become an important investor in Latin America, a decrease in Spanish FDI – from some $20 billion in 2000 to an estimated $8 billion in 2001 (in Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Mexico) – has meant a substantial reduction of FDI flows to the region, as there were no large investments comparable to such 2000 M&A deals as BSCH-Banespa and BSCH-Serfin. But the regional picture is uneven: while flows to Argentina and Brazil dipped, Mexico attracted substantially more FDI in 2001, despite the economic slowdown at home and in the US, overtaking Brazil as the largest recipient in the region. Half of the flows to Mexico are explained by Citicorp’s $12.7 billion acquisition of Bancomex, one of the largest cross-border M&As last year. Another major investment was the $1.8 billion acquisition of four cellular operations of Motorola in Mexico by Telefónica (Spain) (4). Because of these large deals, FDI flows in 2001 are estimated to be over $25 billion, nearly twice those of the previous year.

Brazil attracted less FDI (an estimated $20 billion) in 2001, mainly as a result of slowing privatizations. This decline is concentrated in the services sector – particularly in the telecommunications industry, which had attracted a considerable amount of FDI through privatization in the previous two years. In addition, privatizations in the electric industry encountered problems (such as the indefinite postponement of the privatization of the Sao Paulo state electricity company, Cesp, early last year). A good part of future FDI in Brazil is likely to come from follow-up investment by privatized firms; EDF (Frava), for example, reportedly announced it will invest $500 million in the electrical distribution system of the state of Rio de Janeiro that it had acquired earlier.

Similarly, flows to Argentina halved for the second year in a row, as no large-scale cross-border M&As were registered. Some investment plans have been cancelled(5) or postponed(6) because of the economic crisis. Divestments have been reported as well, with Valeo, the French motor components group, announcing the closure of its plant in Carmen de Areco.

Developing Asia (comprising West Asia, Central Asia and South, East and South-East Asia) also experienced a decline in FDI inflows in 2001, from $144 billion in 2000 to $125 billion in 2001. However, this drop was largely caused by the near-halving of FDI flows to Hong Kong, China, which had recorded an unusually high $64 billion in 2000 (7). Increased flows to India – where FDI inflows for the first three quarters of 2001 were already higher than those for the whole of 2000, according to the Reserve Bank of India – and China have not compensated for this decline.

FDI flows to China gained new momentum in 2001 – an upward trend that is expected to be sustained in the coming years(8). With inflows last year of $46.8 billion, China will again be the largest recipient among developing countries, a position it had lost to Hong Kong in 2000. Many FDI surveys ranked China at the top of FDI locations(9). The largest host country for Korean FDI in 2001 was no longer the United States, but China. Taiwan Province of China, which was already the fourth largest investor in China measured by stock in 2000, has scrapped its $50 million ceiling on investments in the mainland(10). According to JETRO, one-quarter of Japanese TNCs will increase or have already increased FDI in China (figure 1). One-fifth of Japanese TNCs plan to relocate production to China, and in two-thirds of these cases, the move is from Japan to China (figure 2). Relocations from ASEAN countries to China amount to less than 8%; fewer than 2% of the same Japanese TNCs operating in ASEAN countries will stop production completely there and relocate to China

While FDI flows to the Republic of Korea(11) and the Philippines(12) declined in 2001, those to Taiwan Province of China and Thailand remained almost the same as in 2000(13). Reasons for this include slow economic growth and low demand, in particular in the electric and electronics industries. FDI flows to Indonesia have still not recovered, continuing to be negative (divestments) in every quarter since the third quarter of 1998, according to data on a balance-of-payments basis from Bank Indonesia. Judging also by balance-of-payments data, FDI flows to Malaysia similarly declined in 2001(14).

In West Asia, Saudi Arabia, the subregion’s dominant recipient, attracted more FDI in 2001 than in 2000, in part because of the establishment in the latter year of the Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority (SAGIA) and its introduction of a new law allowing wholly-owned foreign affiliates to be established and tax incentives offered. SAGIA has issued licences to foreign companies whose investments reached almost $10 billion, and an additional $25 billion worth of gas projects are planned over the next 10 years.

In Africa, FDI flows increased – from $9 billion in 2000 to $11 billion in 2001 – with rising investments in Morocco and South Africa, even though those in Egypt declined. South Africa recovered from a temporary dip in 2001. As in past years, FDI inflows into this country in 2001 were fuelled by a relatively limited number of large M&As, including privatizations. The largest deal was Acerinox of Spain’s acquisition of Columbus Stainless Steel for 232 million euros. In Nigeria, a large project of liquefied natural gas with an investment between $1.2 and 1.7 billion over several years (up to 2005) is expected to be concluded in early 2002.

Central and Eastern Europe

FDI inflows into Central and Eastern Europe (including former Yugoslavia) remained steady in 2001 at around $27 billion. For the first time since 1989, flows to Poland decreased as the cycle of mega-privatization deals – such as the $4 billion sale of TPSA in 2000 – slowed. In contrast, FDI flows to the Czech Republic, the Russian Federation and Hungary were up slightly in 2001. Investments in the Czech Republic will expand significantly this year, on account of a large, single greenfield investment ($1.35 billion) by a joint venture of Toyota Motor and PSA Peugeot Citroën.

UNCTAD’s updated estimates on regional FDI flows for 2001 were released at this week’s meetings in Geneva of its Commission on Investment, Technology and Related Financial Flows (21-25 January) and the Seventh Annual Conference of the World Association of Investment Promotion Agencies (22-25 January).


Endnotes

1. The data cover completed cross-border M&A deals involving more than 10% equity acquisitions only, provided by Thomson Financial.

2. FDI outflows from Germany in 2001 were boosted mainly by Deutsche Telekom’s two large acquisitions of US service providers (VoiceStream Wireless Corp. and Powertel), ranking among the top cross-border M&As last year.

3. Based on planned investments in 2001, as compiled by Nihon Keizai Shimbun, domestic investment would decline by 5.8% in all industries.

4. Although the ultimate target country of this acquisition (and the home country of Motorola) is the United States, it is recorded as an inflow in Mexico.

5. Investments by such TNCs as Royal Dutch Shell (United Kingdom/Netherlands), CCU (Chile) and BBVA (Spain) were cancelled. In the case of BBVA, the cancellation amounted to $700 million, expected to go into its affiliate, Banco Francés.

6. The Governments of Córdoba and Santa Fe provinces in Argentina have postponed the privatization of their respective electricity utilities, Epec and Epesf, at the request of prospective bidders who were concerned about their financial problems. Source: Business News Americas, 07/09/2001 and 19/11/2001.

7. For details see UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2001: Promoting Linkages (Geneva and New York: United Nations), United Nations publication, Sales No. E.01.II.D.12, box I.2, p. 25.

8. For example, Hitachi, one of the largest electronics TNCs in the world, is planning to invest $0.8 billion over the next five years and increase its production in China eightfold by 2005, to $4 billion annually. The Swedish telecommunications company, Ericsson, announced last September that it would be doubling its investments in China in the coming years.

9. Surveys of Japanese TNCs conducted by the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and JETRO in July/August and October, respectively, reveal that China is the most promising country for Japanese FDI. As reported by Nihon Keizai Shimbun in August 2001, up to 70% of the Japanese TNCs planning to increase overseas production said they would invest in China. A.T. Kearney’s February 2001 FDI Confidence Index survey of CEOs from the 1,000 largest TNCs shows China to be the second most attractive country after the US. The UNCTAD/AFII/Andersen survey of TNCs (see p. 1 above) ranked China as the top FDI destination among Asian countries for the next three to five years.

10. Even though this investment ceiling was generally ineffective, as most FDI from Taiwan Province of China to mainland China had bypassed screening by the Taiwan authority, it reflects a departure from the former restrictive policy.

11. Bank of Korea reported FDI inflows of only $2.5 billion for the first nine months of 2001. Inflows in the whole of 2000 reached more than $9 billion. FDI flows on a notification basis also dropped, from $15.7 billion in 2000 to $11.9 billion in 2001, according to the Ministry of Commerce, Industry and Energy.

12. FDI inflows reported by Bangko Sentral ng Pilipnas for the first eight months of 2001 were only $800 million. The annualized flows based on this amount were $1.2 billion, compared to $2 billion in 2000.

13. The annualized FDI flows on the basis of the data for three quarters reported by the central banks were $4.6 billion for Taiwan Province of China and $3.1 billion for Thailand in 2001, compared to $4.9 billion and $2.8 billion, respectively, the previous year.

14. FDI flows on a balance-of-payments basis were only some $1 billion for the first half of 2001 (Bank Negara), compared to $2.3 billion during the same period in 2000, while, according to the Malaysian Industrial Development Authority, manufacturing FDI on an application basis ($3.1 billion) during the first half of 2001 grew by only 1.9% over the same period for the previous year.


ANNEX

Tables and figures

Box 1. The impact of 11 September on FDI

The effects of the 11 September terrorist attacks on FDI flows are difficult to gauge, but company surveys suggest they will be limited. In October/November 2001, UNCTAD/AFII/Andersen revisited a number of the firms they had surveyed just before 11 September and found that few expected to change their FDI plans in the light of the attacks. Similarly, the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) found that nearly half of all firms surveyed in October 2001 did not expect to change their FDI plans, with most of the others not yet able to make an assessment.a These findings are also consistent with a survey undertaken by A.T. Kearney in September/October 2001: two-thirds of corporate executives from the world’s 1,000 largest firms said they still intended to invest abroad at almost the same levels as previously planned, while 16% said their FDI in 2001 would increase and 20% said it would decline.

The impact of 11 September on FDI

Source: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs and UNCTAD, World Economic Situation and Prospects 2002, pp. 13-15.

a : Based on 659 responses among the 720 Japanese TNCs (both manufacturing and services) surveyed by JETRO in October 2001.
b : “New A.T. Kearney survey captures CEO mood on global economic prospects in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks”, press release on 9 October 2001.

Table 1. FDI inflowsa in 2000 and 2001 (Jan-Sept)
in developed host countries (latest estimates)
(Billions of dollars)

Country 2000b Jan-Sept
2001
 
Australia 11.7 0.2 c
Austria 8.6 1.8 d
Belgium/Luxembourg 218.0 17.1 c
Canada 63.3 20.4  
Denmark 32.3 5.8  
Finland 8.8 1.8 d
France 44.2 29.0  
Germany 176.1 20.8 d
Greece 0.8 1.4  
Ireland 19.0 7.2 c
Italy 13.8 13.4 d
Japan 8.3 4.4  
Netherlands 53.0 30.2  
New Zealand 1.5 2.6  
Norway 6.0 0.9  
Portugal 6.3 2.2 d
Spain 36.6 16.8  
Sweden 23.3 13.6  
Switzerland 16.3 8.6  
United Kingdom 119.7 54.6  
United States 287.7 144.1  

Source: UNCTAD, FDI/TNC database on the basis of official national sources.

a) On a balance-of-payment basis
b) Revised data
c) For January-June only
d) For the first 10 months only

Table 2. FDI inflows a in 2000 and 2001 (Jan-Sept)
in developed home countries(latest estimates)
(Billions of dollars)

Country 2000b Jan-Sept
2001
 
Australia 5.2 4.9 c
Austria 2.2 1.6 d
Belgium/Luxembourg 215.0 19.5 c
Canada 44.0 31.2  
Denmark 24.4 8.5  
Finland 24.0 2.9 d
France 172.5 68.9  
Germany 48.6 50.1 d
Greece 1.9 0.5  
Ireland 3.1 2.2 c
Italy 12.3 12.6 d
Japan 31.6 34.6  
Netherlands 72.1 36.8  
New Zealand 1.3 0.4  
Norway 8.5 2.3  
Portugal 7.1 4.6 d
Spain 53.7 26.4  
Sweden 40.1 7.8  
Switzerland 42.6 12.7  
United Kingdom 255.0 35.6  
United States 152.4 134.1  

Source: UNCTAD, FDI/TNC database on the basis of official national sources.
a) On a balance-of-payment basis
b) Revised data
c) For January-June only
d) For the first 10 months only

Figure 1. The expected effects of China´s accession to the WTO
on the FDI plans of Japanese TNCsa
(Percentage of TNCs responding)

The expected effects of China´s accession to the WTO on the FDI plans of Japanese TNCs

Figure 2. Planned relocation of production sites of Japanese TNCs
to China as a result of China’s accession to the WTOa
(Percentage of TNCs responding)

Planned relocation of production sites of Japanese TNCs to China as a result of China’s accession to the WTO


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