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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.
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:
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