Merging Interests: When Domestic Firms Shape FDI Policy

Author:   Sarah Bauerle Danzman (Indiana University, Bloomington)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781108494144


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   19 December 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Our Price $217.32 Quantity:  
Add to Cart

Share |

Merging Interests: When Domestic Firms Shape FDI Policy


Add your own review!

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Sarah Bauerle Danzman (Indiana University, Bloomington)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.450kg
ISBN:  

9781108494144


ISBN 10:   1108494145
Pages:   348
Publication Date:   19 December 2019
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction; 2. Describing FDI policy through time and space; 3. Financing constraints and liberalized entry; 4. Quantitative tests: financing constraints and liberalization; 5. Quantitative tests: firm and industry level evidence; 6. Comparing Malaysia and Indonesia, 1965–1997; 7. Crisis, reform and policy divergence: Malaysia and Indonesia, 1997–2013; 8. Implications of elite-driven integration.

Reviews

'It is perhaps a truism that countries, firms, and individuals seek to increase their access to capital. Capital market liberalization, the opening of markets to inflows and outflows of capital, has long been seen as a net positive for the local and global economy. However not all countries and industries are equally willing and able to liberalize. Sarah Bauerle Danzman makes an important contribution to our understanding of these dynamics through the development of an argument that gives pride of place to the economic and political preferences of interest groups, politicians, and firms. The theoretical argument in this book is masterful and the evidence is more than compelling. Merging Interests is a must read for anyone who is serious about understanding the global political economy.' David Leblang, University of Virginia 'Bauerle Danzman's carefully researched book reminds us that domestic firms require capital, and if they cannot obtain it domestically, they will seek foreign sources. Capital-constrained domestic firms are therefore the leading advocates for foreign direct investment liberalization in many developing countries. The book, with its mix of quantitative tests and country case studies, is a welcome contribution to a literature that often overlooks the dynamics of banking and capital markets.' David A. Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'It is perhaps a truism that countries, firms, and individuals seek to increase their access to capital. Capital market liberalization, the opening of markets to inflows and outflows of capital, has long been seen as a net positive for the local and global economy. However not all countries and industries are equally willing and able to liberalize. Sarah Bauerle Danzman makes an important contribution to our understanding of these dynamics through the development of an argument that gives pride of place to the economic and political preferences of interest groups, politicians, and firms. The theoretical argument in this book is masterful and the evidence is more than compelling. Merging Interests is a must read for anyone who is serious about understanding the global political economy.' David Leblang, University of Virginia 'Bauerle Danzman's carefully researched book reminds us that domestic firms require capital, and if they cannot obtain it domestically, they will seek foreign sources. Capital-constrained domestic firms are therefore the leading advocates for foreign direct investment liberalization in many developing countries. The book, with its mix of quantitative tests and country case studies, is a welcome contribution to a literature that often overlooks the dynamics of banking and capital markets.' David A. Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology


'It is perhaps a truism that countries, firms, and individuals seek to increase their access to capital. Capital market liberalization, the opening of markets to inflows and outflows of capital, has long been seen as a net positive for the local and global economy. However not all countries and industries are equally willing and able to liberalize. Sarah Bauerle Danzman makes an important contribution to our understanding of these dynamics through the development of an argument that gives pride of place to the economic and political preferences of interest groups, politicians, and firms. The theoretical argument in this book is masterful and the evidence is more than compelling. Merging Interests is a must read for anyone who is serious about understanding the global political economy.' David Leblang, University of Virginia 'Bauerle Danzman's carefully researched book reminds us that domestic firms require capital, and if they cannot obtain it domestically, they will seek foreign sources. Capital-constrained domestic firms are therefore the leading advocates for foreign direct investment liberalization in many developing countries. The book, with its mix of quantitative tests and country case studies, is a welcome contribution to a literature that often overlooks the dynamics of banking and capital markets.' David A. Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'This book on the politics of foreign direct investment restrictions will be a seminal work in the field. Challenging the conventional wisdom, Professor Danzman advances an original theory of when local capital supports the liberalization of foreign investment laws. Using cross-national statistical analysis as well as carefully selected case studies, Professor Danzman provides strong evidence supporting her new and compelling theory.' Nathan Jensen, University of Texas, Austin, author of Incentives to Pander 'Sarah Bauerle Danzman deftly navigates the complexities of corporate finance to explain why large domestic firms, typically wary of FDI, welcome these investments when they lose preferential access to capital. In contrast to labor-centric accounts of FDI liberalization, she anchors the political economy of FDI policy to broader macroeconomic conditions that make firms support greater FDI openness. Her account offers valuable new insights on the politics of FDI regulation, and on how firms adapt to global economic integration.' Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia 'It is perhaps a truism that countries, firms, and individuals seek to increase their access to capital. Capital market liberalization, the opening of markets to inflows and outflows of capital, has long been seen as a net positive for the local and global economy. However not all countries and industries are equally willing and able to liberalize. Sarah Bauerle Danzman makes an important contribution to our understanding of these dynamics through the development of an argument that gives pride of place to the economic and political preferences of interest groups, politicians, and firms. The theoretical argument in this book is masterful and the evidence is more than compelling. Merging Interests is a must read for anyone who is serious about understanding the global political economy.' David Leblang, University of Virginia 'Bauerle Danzman's carefully researched book reminds us that domestic firms require capital, and if they cannot obtain it domestically, they will seek foreign sources. Capital-constrained domestic firms are therefore the leading advocates for foreign direct investment liberalization in many developing countries. The book, with its mix of quantitative tests and country case studies, is a welcome contribution to a literature that often overlooks the dynamics of banking and capital markets.' David A. Singer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology 'This book on the politics of foreign direct investment restrictions will be a seminal work in the field. Challenging the conventional wisdom, Professor Danzman advances an original theory of when local capital supports the liberalization of foreign investment laws. Using cross-national statistical analysis as well as carefully selected case studies, Professor Danzman provides strong evidence supporting her new and compelling theory.' Nathan Jensen, University of Texas, Austin, author of Incentives to Pander 'Sarah Bauerle Danzman deftly navigates the complexities of corporate finance to explain why large domestic firms, typically wary of FDI, welcome these investments when they lose preferential access to capital. In contrast to labor-centric accounts of FDI liberalization, she anchors the political economy of FDI policy to broader macroeconomic conditions that make firms support greater FDI openness. Her account offers valuable new insights on the politics of FDI regulation, and on how firms adapt to global economic integration.' Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia


Author Information

Sarah Bauerle Danzman is an assistant professor of International Studies at Indiana University. She is also a 2019–20 Council of Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow (working in US government to study the inter-agency foreign investment screening process). She has published in various outlets including International Relations Quarterly and Perspectives on Politics, and consults regularly with the World Association of Investment Promotion Agencies and the World Bank Group on investment promotion policy.

Tab Content 6

Author Website:  

Customer Reviews

Recent Reviews

No review item found!

Add your own review!

Countries Available

All regions
Latest Reading Guide

Aorrng

Shopping Cart
Your cart is empty
Shopping cart
Mailing List