This book brings together previous work by the authors that explores the location of foreign direct investment. It uses a broad range of approaches and quantitative techniques. The issues that are addressed concern the changing nature of FDI location, its determinants, and the role of policy in attracting FDI. The chapters of this book focus on the UK experience, but also analyse the location determinants at a European level. The authors present expert analysis that charts the increase in FDI since the mid-1980s and examines the shift in manufacturing and service location, arguing that these result from policy changes and the creation of the European Single Market. Overall, the book finds that the regional benefit of FDI location is unlikely to be long-lasting, owing both to the nature of plant reinvestment and to the effect of agglomeration economics on FDI location.

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Overall, the book finds that the regional benefit of FDI location is unlikely to be long-lasting, owing both to the nature of plant reinvestment and to the effect of agglomeration economics on FDI location.

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1. Introduction.- 2. The Location of FDI across British Regions: A Markov Analysis.- 3. Does Service FDI Locate Differently to Manufacturing FDI? A Regional Analysis for Great Britain.- 4. Non-Intermediate Markets and FDI Location: A New Approach with an Application to British Regions.- 5. Assessing the Regional Impact of Grants on FDI Location: Evidence from UK Regional Policy, 1985-05.- 6. Re-Investment and the Survival of Foreign-Owned Plants.- 7. Agglomeration Economies and the Location of Foreign Direct Investment: A Meta-Analysis.- 8. Geographic Concentration and the Temporal Scope of Agglomeration Economies: An Index Decomposition.- 9. The Motives for the FDI Location Choice in 'Old' and 'New' Europe.- 10. Conclusions.
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This book brings together previous work by the authors that explores the location of foreign direct investment. It uses a broad range of approaches and quantitative techniques. The issues that are addressed concern the changing nature of FDI location, its determinants, and the role of policy in attracting FDI. The chapters of this book focus on the UK experience, but also analyse the location determinants at a European level. The authors present expert analysis that charts the increase in FDI since the mid-1980s and examines the shift in manufacturing and service location, arguing that these result from policy changes and the creation of the European Single Market. Overall, the book finds that the regional benefit of FDI location is unlikely to be long-lasting, owing both to the nature of plant reinvestment and to the effect of agglomeration economics on FDI location.
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Demonstrates the changing regional location of manufacturing and service FDI in the UK Uses quantitative techniques to analyse FDI data and draw key findings Synthesizes a large body of academic work on the location of FDI
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781137431974
Publisert
2016-11-16
Utgiver
Palgrave Macmillan; Palgrave Macmillan
Høyde
210 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Om bidragsyterne

Jonathan Jones is Lecturer in Economics at Newcastle University, UK. His research is in empirical applied microeconomics, focusing on the location and effect of foreign direct investment. His work has been published in numerous economics and regional science journals, and he is co-author of an earlier book on FDI and the regional economy.
Colin Wren is Professor of Economics at Newcastle University, UK. His research is in regional economics, focusing on the interface between government and industry, and its implications for economic development. He has published extensively, serving on national and international bodies. He is a project leader for the recent ESRC Spatial Economics Research Centre.