Foreign direct investment and employment rights in South-Eastern Europe
Foreign direct investment and employment rights in South-Eastern Europe
The dominant neoliberal policy community holds that a reduction in employment rights and social protection is likely to promote economic recovery and growth. It has been suggested that investors are likely to shun countries where such rights are strong; in contrast, radical labour market deregulation is seen as encouraging both local business and multinationals to invest. This study explores whether labour market deregulation in South-Eastern Europe has really encouraged multinationals to invest in the region. We find that the weakening of important aspects of employment rights under the law appears to detract from, rather than encourage, foreign direct investment (FDI). We also show that stronger employment rights are more likely to attract FDI when the host country is located within the European Union. This finding suggests that the complementarities associated with stronger employment rights and more committed labour may offset the overall deterrent effects of the greater regulation associated with EU membership.
141-163
Wood, G.
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Yin, S.
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Mazouz, K
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Cheah, Jeremy
298800de-521f-4aa8-9c04-2f58eece4c6e
January 2016
Wood, G.
730ec301-bdd6-4e62-acd4-6246af95ebb0
Yin, S.
3f59c817-c8b8-4841-96c0-0841278016d5
Mazouz, K
63a2f019-4618-4ab5-a777-1de03dc6f056
Cheah, Jeremy
298800de-521f-4aa8-9c04-2f58eece4c6e
Wood, G., Yin, S., Mazouz, K and Cheah, Jeremy
(2016)
Foreign direct investment and employment rights in South-Eastern Europe.
Cambridge Journal of Economics, 40 (1), .
(doi:10.1093/cje/beu070).
Abstract
The dominant neoliberal policy community holds that a reduction in employment rights and social protection is likely to promote economic recovery and growth. It has been suggested that investors are likely to shun countries where such rights are strong; in contrast, radical labour market deregulation is seen as encouraging both local business and multinationals to invest. This study explores whether labour market deregulation in South-Eastern Europe has really encouraged multinationals to invest in the region. We find that the weakening of important aspects of employment rights under the law appears to detract from, rather than encourage, foreign direct investment (FDI). We also show that stronger employment rights are more likely to attract FDI when the host country is located within the European Union. This finding suggests that the complementarities associated with stronger employment rights and more committed labour may offset the overall deterrent effects of the greater regulation associated with EU membership.
Text
Cambridge journal of Economics
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 16 October 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 December 2014
Published date: January 2016
Organisations:
Banking & Finance
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 408195
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/408195
ISSN: 0309-166X
PURE UUID: 0e05b6aa-b02a-4f1e-9219-0fdbc92bf9e9
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Date deposited: 17 May 2017 04:01
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:28
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Contributors
Author:
G. Wood
Author:
S. Yin
Author:
K Mazouz
Author:
Jeremy Cheah
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