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Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Spillovers: Hi-tech Electronics in Guadalajara, Mexico Kevin P. Gallagher Department of International Relations, Boston University Global Development and Environment Institute, Tufts University Lyuba Zarsky Global Development and Environment Institute, Tufts University
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The Promise of FDI More stable form of foreign exchange Employment, tax revenue Productivity spillovers –Backward linkages –Human capital spillovers –Forward linkages Crowding in domestic investment
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Environmental Spillovers Transfer of cleaner technology and better environmental management systems Requirements for better standards by local suppliers Exports must meet demands of green consumers and higher standards in EU, US, Japan
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Border Zone: Mostly Audio / video 13 Computer monitor manufacturing. 13 TV manufacturing Western Region: Focus on IT industry, High tech electronics industry, Telecommunications & Electronic subassemblies. 10 Billion exported in 2002. Center Zone: Home appliances and consumer electronics. Electronics Clusters in Mexico
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Querétaro VISTAR VITROMATIC (2) Cuernavaca NEC Torreón THOMSON Monterrey PIONNER DANFOSS COMPRESSORS VITROMATIC (3) MABE (2) KODAK NIPPON DENSO (Automotriz) AXA YAZAKI (Automotriz) Mexicali SONY DAEWOO (SLRC) MITSUBISHI GOLDSTAR AUDIO & VIDEO ELECTRODOMESTIC COMPUTER EQUIPMENT TELECOM OTHER Aguascalientes TEXAS INSTR. XEROX SIEMENS Querétaro CLARION DAEWOO BLACK & DECKER MABE (2) SINGER SIEMENS State of Mexico MABE BRAUN ELECTROLUX SUNBEAM KOBLENZ ERICSSON ALCATEL/INDETEL AMP Puebla GESTAR SINGER VITROMATIC Saltillo MABE HAMILTON BEACH* Reynosa VITROMATIC NOKIA DELCO (Automotriz) PHILIPS SONY MATSUSHITA (Automotriz) LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES FUJITSU (Automotriz) CONDURA (Automotriz) DELNOSA (Automotriz) San Luis Potosi MABE GE MABE SANYO Chihuahua MOTOROLA ALTEL KIOCERA JABIL Juárez KENWOOD ELECTROLUX ACER TOSHIBA PHILIPS THOMSON ELAMEX PLEXUS Tijuana SANYO SONY HITACHI MATSUSHITA JVC SAMSUNG PIONNER SANYO ELECTRODOMÉSTICOS PHILIPS CASIO KODAK CANON KYOCERA INTERNACIONAL RECTIFIER MITSUBISHI SHARP Guadalajara I.B.M H.P. TECHNICOLOR TELECT TYCO KODAK VOGT ELECTRONIC SIEMENS VDO SOLECTRON DE MEXICO FLEXTRONICS JABIL CIRCUIT BENCHMARK SANMINA-SCI State of Mexico ELECTROLUX FILTER QUEEN HOOVER IMAN KOBLENZ MABE PHILIPS SUNBEAM OLIVETTI PANASONIC OLIMPIA
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Why firms came Proximity to U.S Markets (hi-tech boom) NAFTA (tariffs and rules of origin) PITEX and Maquila Programs Favorable Exchange rate Guadalajara infrastructure
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Backward Linkages 95 percent of inputs are imported 80 percent decline in local suppliers from 1985 97 percent of all investment between 1994 and 2002 was foreign Joint R&D projects limited Success story: –Electronica Pantera
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Human Capital Spillovers Low end of production process –little training needed or given Shift to contract employees Few domestic firms to spill over to Success story: –IBM training center and spin-offs
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Forward Linkages Hi-tech diffusion relatively low Limited success of “digital divide” projects
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Environmental Spillovers Technology Transfer: –Bringing EMS but not clear if in compliance –SCI-Sanmina and Industria Limpia program Greening the supply chain: –Little contact with local suppliers to begin with –No requirements for existing suppliers Exporting to higher standards: –Not in Guadalajara plants (but in plants closer to higher regulation markets)
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Why so few spillovers? Barriers to entry into global supplier networks Incentive to import inputs Macroeconomic uncertainty Weak local capacity Lack of policy response Lack of policy space
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Why firms are leaving Slowdown in U.S. demand China’s accession to WTO Overvaluation of the peso (wages) Lack of local productive capacities Lack of domestic and regional markets
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Preliminary Results Little evidence of domestic spillovers Spillovers that did occur were not allocated by the market Evidence of foreign investment crowding out domestic investment Role for public policy in steering FDI toward development goals
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Why Weak Development Impacts? Lack of domestic and regional markets Dynamic sectors are enclaves Scant governmental attention to learning
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What to do? Elements of a new strategy: –Focus on domestic markets –Invest in building domestic capacities for production and innovation (education, R&D, infrastructure) –Reduce domestic cost of capital and improve climate for domestic investment without re-triggering inflation –Develop policies to maximize spillovers from FDI –What role for targeted industrial policy? What room to move? –Constraints of global and regional trade and investment regimes –Inflation
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Export Goods Not People? Annual net job creation: 79,000 per year New entrants into workforce: 730,000 per year Real wages: down 12 percent (93-2002);reach 93 levels in 2003 Benefits: 45 percent of all new jobs are without benefits Informal sector: absorbs 30 to 60 percent of the total Mexican workforce works Migrants to United States: 4000,000 per year (up from 200,000 pre-NAFTA)
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Endogenous Productive Capacity?
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