Publication:
Does Foreign Direct Investment Catalyze Local Structural Transformation and Human Capital Accumulation? Evidence from China

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2022-03-03
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2022-03-09
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This paper examines the effect of foreign direct investment on local structural transformation and human capital accumulation in China, exploiting variations in foreign direct investment inflows across manufacturing sub-sectors caused by China’s foreign direct investment deregulation and initial sectoral composition patterns across China’s cities and provinces. Using a panel of city-level data from 1990 to 2005, the paper shows that manufacturing foreign direct investment inflows greatly accelerated city-level structural transformation and human capital accumulation. By expanding access to the global market, foreign direct investment created a huge pull factor that drew excess labor away from farms into factories and services. Foreign direct investment has promoted high school and university enrollment by paying a higher wage premium for skilled workers and pushing up the skill premium. The positive effect on structural transformation is largely driven by export-oriented foreign direct investment, while market-seeking foreign direct investment has a much larger effect on college enrollment. High-skill foreign direct investment has a larger effect on college enrollment than low-skill foreign direct investment.
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Liu, Yan. 2022. Does Foreign Direct Investment Catalyze Local Structural Transformation and Human Capital Accumulation? Evidence from China. Policy Research Working Paper; 9952. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37104 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.
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