Welfare Gains from Foreign Direct Investment Through Technology Transfer to Local Suppliers

Details

Research Team

Garrick Blalock, Paul J. Gertler

Topic

Finance

Publication

Journal publication

Country

Indonesia

Region

East Asia & Pacific

Tags

foreign investment, market effects, technology diffusion

Study Overview

We hypothesize that multinational firms operating in emerging markets transfer technology to local suppliers to increase their productivity and to lower input prices. To avoid hold-up by any single supplier, the foreign firm must make the technology widely available. This technology diffusion induces entry and more competition which lowers prices in the supply market. As a result, not just the foreign-owned firm, but all firms downstream of that supply market obtain lower prices. We test this hypothesis using a panel dataset of Indonesian manufacturing establishments.

Study Results

We find strong evidence of productivity gains, greater competition, and lower prices among local firms in markets that supply foreign entrants. The technology transfer is Pareto improving — output and profits increase for firms in both the supplier and buyer sectors. Further, the technology transfer generates an externality that benefits buyers in other sectors downstream from the supply sector as well. This externality may provide a justification for policy intervention to encourage foreign investment.

Intervention: Policy to encourage foreign investment