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Determinants of Korean FDI and Corporate Performance in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2000s : Micro and Macro Data Analysis


Affiliations
1 Assistant Professor & Head, Department of Portuguese, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Imun-ro 107, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul, S. Korea 02450, Korea, Republic of
2 Associate Professor & Head (Corresponding Author), Department of Hindi, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Imun-ro 107, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul, S. Korea 02450, Korea, Republic of

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This paper analyzed what determined the FDI flow of Korean firms and how characteristics of local market in Latin America affected the performance of Korean corporations. The empirical results of this study showed that it supported the existing theoretical hypothesis. The test to reveal FDI determinants using macro data indicated that FDI flow increased with GDP of host country and economic boom in the United States. The distance appeared to hamper FDI flow as expected in the basic gravity model, with political corruption in the host country acting as another barrier to FDI. The micro data analysis showed that the characteristics of the local market generally had a positive impact on corporate performance, even though the impact varied depending on each characteristic. For instance, factors that were positively related to corporate sales are market access, political stability, potential for growth, distribution networks, the facility of contracting and payment, suitability for FDI, suitability for resource development, and the predictability of the local market ; well-developed infrastructure, the facility of contract and payment, and suitability for resource development positively affected corporate profit.


Keywords

Latin America, Foreign Direct Investment, Corporate Performance, Korean Corporations, Micro and Macro Data Analysis

G11, F21, F23, O54

September 28, 2018 ; Paper sent back for Revision : March 14, 2019 ; Paper Acceptance Date : May 10, 2019

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  • Determinants of Korean FDI and Corporate Performance in Latin America and the Caribbean in 2000s : Micro and Macro Data Analysis

Abstract Views: 158  |  PDF Views: 0

Authors

Kisu Kwon
Assistant Professor & Head, Department of Portuguese, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Imun-ro 107, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul, S. Korea 02450, Korea, Republic of
Taejin Koh
Associate Professor & Head (Corresponding Author), Department of Hindi, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Imun-ro 107, Dongdaemun-gu, Seoul, S. Korea 02450, Korea, Republic of

Abstract


This paper analyzed what determined the FDI flow of Korean firms and how characteristics of local market in Latin America affected the performance of Korean corporations. The empirical results of this study showed that it supported the existing theoretical hypothesis. The test to reveal FDI determinants using macro data indicated that FDI flow increased with GDP of host country and economic boom in the United States. The distance appeared to hamper FDI flow as expected in the basic gravity model, with political corruption in the host country acting as another barrier to FDI. The micro data analysis showed that the characteristics of the local market generally had a positive impact on corporate performance, even though the impact varied depending on each characteristic. For instance, factors that were positively related to corporate sales are market access, political stability, potential for growth, distribution networks, the facility of contracting and payment, suitability for FDI, suitability for resource development, and the predictability of the local market ; well-developed infrastructure, the facility of contract and payment, and suitability for resource development positively affected corporate profit.


Keywords


Latin America, Foreign Direct Investment, Corporate Performance, Korean Corporations, Micro and Macro Data Analysis

G11, F21, F23, O54

September 28, 2018 ; Paper sent back for Revision : March 14, 2019 ; Paper Acceptance Date : May 10, 2019




DOI: https://doi.org/10.17010/ijf%2F2019%2Fv13i6%2F123896