Content area

Abstract

This paper seeks to investigate the impact of foreign direct investments (FDIs) on industrial pollution (...... and BOD emissions) on a large sample of highly heterogeneous countries. By using panel data on manufacturing FDIs from France, Germany, Sweden, and the United Kingdom between 1995 and 2008, and by developing an empirical model with first and second order interaction terms, we investigate the existence and the conditionality of the most controversial FDI-induced effects on industrial emissions, i.e., Pollution Haven, Factor Endowments and Pollution Halo hypotheses. The paper has three main findings: (1) the central hypotheses linking pollution to FDI are found to act simultaneously, with opposing effects; (2) FDIs are associated with pollution reduction, i.e., predominating pollution halo induced effect, in countries with low to average capital-to-labour ratio but not too lax environmental regulation; (3) FDIs are found to increase pollution, i.e., prevailing pollution haven and/or factor endowments induced effects, in countries with average capital endowments and lax environmental regulations, as well as in all the capital abundant countries, though with a smaller magnitude in countries having strict environmental regulations and/or a high-skilled labour force. Some specific and interesting findings are discussed regarding different FDI-origin countries and FDI-host country groups.

Details

Title
How does Foreign Direct Investment Affect Pollution? Toward a Better Understanding of the Direct and Conditional Effects
Author
Zugravu-soilita, Natalia
Pages
293-338
Publication year
2017
Publication date
Feb 2017
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09246460
e-ISSN
15731502
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1859751308
Copyright
Environmental and Resource Economics is a copyright of Springer, 2017.