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UNCTAD and the study of globalization Michael Hanni Economist Division on Investment and Enterprise UNCTAD.

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Presentation on theme: "UNCTAD and the study of globalization Michael Hanni Economist Division on Investment and Enterprise UNCTAD."— Presentation transcript:

1 UNCTAD and the study of globalization Michael Hanni Economist Division on Investment and Enterprise UNCTAD

2 UNCTAD and the study of globalization UNCTAD, FDI, and foreign affiliates statistics  What does UNCTAD bring to this discussion?  What are we doing? Putting the pieces together: the expanding networks of multinational enterprises  “Global factory”, integrated international networks, and the challenges for statistics and analysis

3 What does UNCTAD bring to this discussion? UNCTAD serves as the focal point within the UN system on investment issues. This includes a core competency in the collection of FDI/TNC statistics and research on FDI related development and policy issues As such, we are primarily secondary compilers of your data (thank you!)  Having global scope gives us a unique view into the difficulties you face

4 What are we working with? FDI/TNC operations: more than 1 million entries on detail geographical and industry breakdown of FDI flows and stocks, and more than 2 million entries on the activities of TNCs (parent firms and foreign affiliates) Largest TNCs: firm level data on the largest 100 TNCs in the world and the largest 100 TNCs from developing and transition economies) Cross-border M&As: data covering more than 86,000 individual M&A transaction from 1987 onwards

5 Issues we face as secondary compilers and researchers Reliability/completeness of data:  FDI: differing levels of data availability by country, especially when it comes to industry/partner data as well as component data  TNC activities data: different coverage in variables, and availability of industry/partner data (especially 2-dimensional data) Usefulness:  Issues related to the ultimate ownership (especially related to flows in developing countries, are the Cayman Islands really a major investor in the developing world?)

6 Issues we face as secondary compilers and researchers Comparability:  FDI and TNC activities: bilateral data is highly sensitive to sampling/weighting in each compiling country, often leading to very different results (how large is the US presence in the Czech Republic? 23,000 or 66,000 jobs?)  TNC activities: availability of comparative data, for example: employment by sector, etc. Timeliness:  We often collect as soon as you publish, but often that is not fast enough for our primary customers Most important issue we face: existence of data  In many of the most important countries for our research there is little or no data

7 Things we are working on… Putting your statistics to work!  Research: WIR series and more to provide policymakers with a comprehensive picture of specific FDI/TNC related development topics WIR 2009: FDI and agricultural production WIR 2010: Investing in a Low-Carbon Economy  Policy advocacy: development of actionable policy advice based on our best reading of data – not only FDI/TNC, but trade and more

8 Things we are working on… Technical assistance to improve the statistical capability of developing and transition economies (usually in cooperation with national compilers like yourselves)  Assistance in implementing the Common Survey and establishing an effective survey system to collect and disseminate data on FDI flows/stock as well as the activities of foreign affiliates  Recent national and regional workshops: Albania, Belarus, Burundi, Comoros, Congo (DRC), Djibouti, Dominican Republic, Ethiopia, Iran (Islamic Republic of), Kenya, Malawi, Morocco, Rwanda, Seychelles, Swaziland, Tanzania, Uganda, Viet Nam, Zambia

9 Putting the pieces together: the expanding networks of MNEs Globalization as a phenomenon is continuing to evolve, manifesting itself in different ways  Non-equity modalities are an important aspect of this evolution and our ability to view this activity is limited Licensing, franchising, contract manufacturing, contract farming, management contracts and the like  Making sure that we capture the unique impact related to FDI and non-equity modalities is also tricky (no double counting!)

10 Of course, this isn’t really that new…

11 Putting the pieces together: the expanding networks of MNEs Future work includes mapping this evolution in order to give developing- country policymakers additional tools and policy advice We need your help!

12 Thank you! For more information visit: www.unctad.org/wir


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