4.5 Article

The impacts of foreign direct investment on total factor productivity: an empirical study of agricultural enterprises

Journal

CHINA AGRICULTURAL ECONOMIC REVIEW
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/CAER-02-2023-0035

Keywords

Foreign direct investment (FDI); Total factor productivity (TFP); Chinese agricultural enterprises

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This paper examines the impact of six possible FDI spillover channels on TFP of Chinese agricultural enterprises and the moderating role of absorptive capacity. The results suggest that foreign-invested agricultural enterprises benefit from FDI, while domestic agricultural enterprises experience negative aggregate FDI spillover effects. However, threshold effects show that firms near the technological frontier experience positive spillover effects, while firms far from the frontier experience negative effects. These findings contribute to formulating foreign investment policies for agricultural enterprises and help them to improve their productivity.
PurposeThis paper aims to examine the impact of six possible foreign direct investment (FDI) spillover channels on the total factor productivity (TFP) of Chinese agricultural enterprises and investigate the moderating role of absorptive capacity (technological acumen) on TFP spillover effects.Design/methodology/approachBased on data from 118 agricultural and related Chinese industries, the authors employ a multithreshold regression model to empirically analyze the impact of FDI on the TFP of agricultural enterprises and the threshold effect of absorptive capacity. To overcome potential endogeneity problems, the authors select the FDI stock of corresponding USA industries and the industrial access policy index as instrumental variables and re-estimate the model.FindingsThe results suggest foreign-invested agricultural enterprises are more likely to benefit from FDI, while the aggregate FDI spillover effect is negative for domestic agricultural enterprises. However, once threshold effects are introduced, the authors find firms close to (far from) the technological frontier experience statistically significant positive (negative) spillover effects. Similar results are obtained for virtually all FDI spillover channels for firms in both upstream and downstream industries. FDI spillovers, when they occur, can be a two-edged sword - benefiting some firms at the expense of others.Originality/valueThe authors introduce six FDI spillover channels to examine the impact of FDI on the productivity of foreign-invested and domestic agricultural enterprises. Moreover, the authors analyze the threshold effect of firms' absorptive capacity. These findings can help formulate foreign investment introduction policies based on the characteristics of agricultural enterprises with different ownership structures. These results are also beneficial for agricultural enterprises to better exploit FDI spillover effects and improve their productivity.

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