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FOCUS ON FOREIGN INVESTMENTS:Pro-poor Foreign Investments

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International Relations-PSC 201
VU
LESSON 39
FOCUS ON FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
Investing in poor countries
Many scholars agree that foreign investments can potentially help poor countries progress. Channeling
foreign investments to improve the lives of the poor requires multidimensional efforts by a range of
stakeholders to counterbalance the urge of profit maximization with the need to achieve more benevolent
growth.
How Foreign Investments Aid Poor Countries
The conventional argument states that foreign investments can help poor countries acquire the technology,
management skills and exposure to market mechanisms which are vital requirements to kick-start economic
development.
Developing countries are encouraged by international financial institutions to provide the essential legal,
institutional and physical infrastructure necessary to attract foreign investments. Yet the contribution of
foreign direct investments and multinational activities in helping develop poor countries remains limited,
except in some resource rich African and Asian countries, where too benefits are unevenly distributed.
Partnership with supranational agencies, like the World Bank or with the UN system, has inculcated a sense
of social responsibility in multinational organizations.
Prominent initiatives including the UN's Global Compact which led to articulation of the Millennium
Development Goals, as well as the proposed Marshall Plan for Africa, have explicitly aimed to collaborate
closely with multinationals to help poor countries develop.
Contentions Concerning Foreign Investments
Conceding the utility of making capitalism more inclusive and pro-poor, it is also important to realize that
foreign investment can also have seriously adverse impacts on industries where the very poor work.
Foreign investments in the informal economy including sectors like forestry, agriculture and textiles can be
particularly problematic. When multinationals set up plants and factories or when smaller farms or
companies enter into partnerships with large corporations, it often leads smaller businesses to shut down.
Multinational intrusion in the formal economy can lead to a loss of jobs which has compelled poor workers,
including women, to enter the casual workforce. Poor people cannot upgrade their skills to meet
requirements of working in an increasingly sophisticated marketplace.
Pro-poor Foreign Investments
If multinationals were to provide training within the informal sector, many marginalized workers could
enter the formal economy and boost their incomes. Governments in developing countries need to also
upgrade skills and invest in the infrastructure of the informal sector. NGOs are trying to fill this existing
gap.
Relevant Vocabulary
Multinational ­ involving several nations
Counterbalance ­ to balance an uneven position by a countering move
Upgrade - improve
Infrastructure ­ structure of communications, road and rail, etc.
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International Relations-PSC 201
VU
Suggested Readings
Students are advised to visit the following web-pages for this lecture, which provide useful and interesting
information:
International Trade and Investment
www.iie.com/research/trade.htm
FDI: The Overstretched Myth
www.foreignaffairs.org/20050301facomment84201/david-h-levey-stuart-s-brown/the-overstretch-
myth.html
Table of Contents:
  1. WHAT IS INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND WHAT IS ITS RELEVANCE?
  2. APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: THEORIES IN IR
  3. APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS:Traditional Approach
  4. THE NATION-STATE SYSTEM:Further Evolution of Nation-State
  5. THE NATION STATE SYSTEM: BASIC FEATURES OF A NATION-STATE
  6. NATIONAL INTEREST:Criteria for Defining National Interest
  7. NATIONAL INTEREST:Variations in National Interest, Relevant Vocabulary
  8. BALANCE OF POWER (BOP):BoP from a historical perspective
  9. BALANCE OF POWER (CONTINUED):Degree of Polarization, Functions of BoP
  10. DIPLOMACY:How Diplomacy Functions, Traditional Versus Modern Diplomacy
  11. DIPLOMACY (CONTINUED):Diplomatic Procedures & Practices, Functions of Diplomacy
  12. COLONIALISM, NEO-COLONIALISM & IMPERIALISM:Judging Colonization
  13. COLONIALISM, NEO-COLONIALISM & IMPERIALISM:Types of Neo-Colonialism
  14. COLONIALISM, NEO-COLONIALISM & IMPERIALISM:Objectives of Imperialism
  15. NEW INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER:Criticism of IEO, NIEO Activities
  16. NEW INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER:Prerequisites for the NIEO
  17. NON-ALIGNMENT MOVEMENT:Origin of NAM, NAM’s Institutional Structure
  18. NON-ALIGNMENT MOVEMENT (CONTINUED):Cairo Summit, Egypt - 1964
  19. NON-ALIGNMENT MOVEMENT:Criticism of NAM, NAM and Pakistan
  20. THE COLD WAR AND ITS IMPACTS - INTRODUCING THE COLD WAR PHENOMENON
  21. THE COLD WAR AND ITS IMPACTS (CONTINUED):Truman Doctrine, Marshal Plan
  22. THE COLD WAR AND ITS IMPACTS (CONTINUED):End of the Cold War
  23. DISARMAMENT AND ARMS CONTROL:History of Disarmament
  24. DISARMAMENT AND ARMS CONTROL (CONTINUED):Other Disarmament Efforts
  25. THE RELEVANCE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
  26. THE RELEVANCE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS (CONTINUED)
  27. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS:Need for IGOs, Categorizing IGOs
  28. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS (CONTINUED):United Nations, Criticism of the UN
  29. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS (CONTINUED):European Union, World Bank
  30. THE ROLE OF DECISION MAKING IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
  31. DECISION MAKING (CONTINUED):Rational Actor Model, Group Politics Model
  32. SYSTEMS APPROACH TO IR:Underlying Assumptions, Elements of the System
  33. SYSTEMS BASED APPROACH (CONTINUED) – DISTINCT SYSTEMS IN IR
  34. LIBERALISM AND SOCIAL DEMOCRACY:Neoliberalism
  35. LIBERALISM AND SOCIAL DEMOCRACY (CONTINUED):Liberalism vs. Social Democracy
  36. INTEGRATION IN IR:Preconditions for Integration, Assessing Integration
  37. GLOBALIZATION AND ITS IMPLICATIONS:Advocates of Globalization
  38. THE GLOBAL DIVIDE:World Social Forum, Can the Global Divide Be Bridged?
  39. FOCUS ON FOREIGN INVESTMENTS:Pro-poor Foreign Investments
  40. CONFLICT AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION:Components of a Conflict
  41. CONFLICT RESOLUTION:Creative response, Appropriate assertiveness
  42. THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT:Global Concern for the Environment
  43. THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT:Environmental Concerns and IR, Some Other Issues
  44. HOW IR DIFFER FROM DOMESTIC POLITICS?:Strategies for altering state behavior
  45. CHANGE AND IR:Continuity in IR, Causality and counterfactuals, IR in a nutshell