The catalogue contains study descriptions in various languages. The system searches with your search terms from study descriptions available in the language you have selected. The catalogue does not have ‘All languages’ option as due to linguistic differences this would give incomplete results. See the User Guide for more detailed information.
Inward Investment and UK Economic Performance, 1983-1992
Creator
Pain, N., National Institute of Economic and Social Research
Hubert, F., National Institute of Economic and Social Research
Study number / PID
4408 (UKDA)
10.5255/UKDA-SN-4408-1 (DOI)
Data access
Restricted
Series
Not available
Abstract
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The objective of this research was to undertake a quantitative analysis of the impact of inward investment on domestically-owned firms in the UK manufacturing sector in order to assess the hypothesis put forward in the Competitiveness White Paper that foreign firms have helped to raise the rate of labour productivity growth in the UK by transferring innovative production and managerial techniques. In particular the project wished to investigate:
whether the presence of foreign-owned firms raises the rate of technical progress in domestic firms within the industry in which inward investment takes place.
whether foreign investments in some industries also improve the performance of domestic firms in other manufacturing industries.
whether there are significant differences in the demand for labour by domestic and foreign-owned firms.
whether any conclusions are sensitive to different measures of the scale of UK operations by foreign-owned firms.
whether there are significant differences in the 'spillover' effects of inward investments according to the nationality of the investor.
whether any estimated effects from inward investment remain robust when other potential determinants of technical progress, such as imports and domestic R&D expenditures, are also included in the analysis.
It has been confirmed that foreign-owned firms have a significant positive effect on the level of technical efficiency in domestic firms using an industry-level panel data set for the labour demand of domestic firms. This means that find ings in existing studies of a similar relationship for the aggregate manufacturing sector reflect genuine spillovers from foreign to domestic firms, rather than just a 'batting average' effect from a rising share of more productive fo reign firms.
Evidence has been found of significant intra-industry and inter-industry spillovers from foreign firms. This means that inward...
Terminology used is generally based on DDI controlled vocabularies: Time Method, Analysis Unit, Sampling Procedure and Mode of Collection, available at CESSDA Vocabulary Service.
Methodology
Data collection period
Not available
Country
United Kingdom
Time dimension
Cross-sectional (one-time) study
with time series for selected industries
Analysis unit
Industries
National
Universe
Selected SIC80 industries between 1983-1992
Sampling procedure
No sampling (total universe)
Kind of data
Not available
Data collection mode
Compilation or synthesis of existing material
Funding information
Grant number
R000237815
Access
Publisher
UK Data Service
Publication year
2001
Terms of data access
The Data Collection is available to UK Data Service registered users subject to the End User Licence Agreement.
Commercial use of the data requires approval from the data owner or their nominee. The UK Data Service will contact you.
Related publications
Hubert, F. and Pain, N. (2001) 'Inward investment and technical progress' in N. Pain (ed.), , Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 66-103. ISBN033-392536X | 978-0333925362