Determinants of foreign direct investment in Real estate in European countries – panel data analysis Sviatlana Anop Royal Instritute of Technology (KTH), Stockholm, Sweden
Introduction The goal of this study is to highlight theoretical and empirical findings about determinants of foreign direct investment in real estate in developed European countries-members of OECD.
Introduction Figure 1. FDI Inflows and outflows, , and 2008 forecast Source: OECD
Introduction
Literature review Market-size hypothesis: international investments are “attracted by both the size of the host country and by the purchasing power of its inhabitants.” Sader (1993) Nonnemberg and Cardoso de Medonco (2004) and Mottaleb (2007) have shown that such factors as the size and rate of growth of the GDP, the availability of skilled labor, modern communication facilities significantly affect the inflow of FDI in developed countries
Contribution However almost no research was done regarding investments in particular industries and assets, and more specifically regarding FDI in real estate. Moshirian F., Pham T. (2000) in their study of US FDI show that US financial wealth, US FDI in manufacturing and banking, US bilateral trade, foreign current account balance and US foreign financial liabilities contribute positively to the expansion of US FDI in real estate. This study investigates determinants of FDI in real estate in 15 OECD Countries of European area for
Data Open data source: The annual panel data consists of 15 OECD countries of European area and runs from both are inclusive.
List of countries 1.Austria 2.Czech republic 3.Denmark 4.Finland 5.France 6.Germany 7.Greece 8.Hungary 9.Netherlands 10.Norway 11.Poland 12.Slovak republic 13.Spain 14.Sweden 15.United Kingdom
General dynamic model FDIRE i,t = a i +β 1 GY i,t-1 +β 2 y i,t-1 +β 5 h i,t-1 +β 6 road i,t-1 +ε it where FDIRE - FDI in real estate, GY - real GDP growth, y - GDP, h - human capital, road – road infrastructure.
Descriptive statistics Main variables in the model: FDI in RE is measured in millions US Dollars. The Gross Domestic Product (GDP) measured in billion US Dollars is the way of measuring the size of country’s economy. Real GDP growth is measured in percentage and GDP per capita in US dollars. Human capital is measured as a tertiary rate of the country. This is a percentage of population age that enrolled in the tertiary schools. Road reflects road infrastructure in the country and is measured as road fatalities per million inhabitants.
Descriptive statistics
First-difference model ΔFDIRE i,t =β 1 ΔGY i,t-1 +β 2 Δy i,t-1 +β 5 Δh i,t-1 + +β 6 Δroad i,t-1 +Δε it where FDIRE - FDI in real estate, GY - real GDP growth, y - GDP, h - human capital, road – road infrastructure.
Fixed effect model FDIRE i,t = a i +β 1 GY i,t-1 +β 2 y i,t-1 +β 5 h i,t-1 +β 6 road i,t-1 + ε it where FDIRE - FDI in real estate, GY - real GDP growth, y - GDP, h - human capital, road – road infrastructure.
Results
Dinamic model Wooldridge test: no serial autocorrelation Fist-difference model: no significant estimators Fixed effect model: GDP growth is not signiciant, GDP size is significant, positive effect, human capital and road infrastructure are significant, negative effect Random effects model: no significant estimators
Sensitivity analysis
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