The Impact of the Belt and Road Initiative on Foreign Direct Investment from China, the United States, and Major Investor Countries

         
Author Name TODO Yasuyuki (Faculty Fellow, RIETI) / NISHITATENO Shuhei (Research Associate, RIETI) / Sean BROWN (Waseda University)
Creation Date/NO. January 2025 25-E-004
Research Project Research on Relationships between Economic Networks and National Security
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Abstract

This paper investigates the impact of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) on foreign direct investment (FDI) from China and other major source countries, such as the United States (US), France and Japan, by applying staggered difference-in-differences (DID) event study estimations to a gravity model. In addition to estimations using country-pair fixed effects, we employ models with source and host country-year fixed effects to control for effects through changes in any host country attribute due to the BRI, such as infrastructural changes. By so doing, we separately estimate the BRI effect as changes occur in bilateral relationships. We find that FDI from China, Hong Kong, the US, Switzerland, Japan, and France to BRI countries increased in the post-BRI period, whereas FDI from the UK, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg decreased. After controlling for country-year fixed effects, there remains a post-BRI upward trend in FDI from the US, Switzerland, and France and a downward trend in FDI from the UK, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. These findings suggest that FDI from non-China countries to BRI countries are affected by individual bilateral relationships between the non-China countries and the BRI recipient countries. For example, the US may invest more in BRI countries to strategically compete with China in those locations.