New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI

Motivated by the call to action from the United Nations Climate Change Conference COP 28, this paper analyzes the relationship between a country's level of biocapacity, subsoil assets, and sectoral FDI. A theoretical model is developed, with its main innovation being the consideration that bioc...

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Main Authors: Doytch, Nadia, Elheddad, Mohamed, Perez-Sebastian, Fidel
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出版: Archīum Ateneo 2025
主題:
FDI
在線閱讀:https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/314
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eneco.2025.108362
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機構: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.asog-pubs-13162025-05-15T05:19:25Z New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI Doytch, Nadia Elheddad, Mohamed Perez-Sebastian, Fidel Motivated by the call to action from the United Nations Climate Change Conference COP 28, this paper analyzes the relationship between a country's level of biocapacity, subsoil assets, and sectoral FDI. A theoretical model is developed, with its main innovation being the consideration that biocapacity and environmental regulation synergically impose costs on firms. The model predicts the existence of FDI pollution heaven effects and highlights the role of biocapacity preservation in mitigating possible FDI resource curse impacts. To test these predictions, we utilize a unique dataset of six sectoral FDI inflows for 99 nations over the period from 1984 to 2019. We explore the effects of biocapacity directly and through its interaction with subsoil assets. Our findings corroborate the predictions of the model, revealing that subsoil resources tend to promote extractives (mining) FDI and hurt non-extractives (non-mining) FDI, whereas biocapacity tends to decrease all types of FDI inflows. Strong evidence in favor of the FDI natural resource curse is observed for low-income and high-income countries. Importantly, our empirical results reinforce that biocapacity protection can play a critical role in mitigating this curse. 2025-05-01T07:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/314 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eneco.2025.108362 Ateneo School of Government Publications Archīum Ateneo Biocapacity FDI Natural-resource curse Panel data Pollution-haven hypothesis Sectoral analysis Environmental Policy Environmental Studies Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration Social and Behavioral Sciences
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Biocapacity
FDI
Natural-resource curse
Panel data
Pollution-haven hypothesis
Sectoral analysis
Environmental Policy
Environmental Studies
Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle Biocapacity
FDI
Natural-resource curse
Panel data
Pollution-haven hypothesis
Sectoral analysis
Environmental Policy
Environmental Studies
Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Social and Behavioral Sciences
Doytch, Nadia
Elheddad, Mohamed
Perez-Sebastian, Fidel
New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI
description Motivated by the call to action from the United Nations Climate Change Conference COP 28, this paper analyzes the relationship between a country's level of biocapacity, subsoil assets, and sectoral FDI. A theoretical model is developed, with its main innovation being the consideration that biocapacity and environmental regulation synergically impose costs on firms. The model predicts the existence of FDI pollution heaven effects and highlights the role of biocapacity preservation in mitigating possible FDI resource curse impacts. To test these predictions, we utilize a unique dataset of six sectoral FDI inflows for 99 nations over the period from 1984 to 2019. We explore the effects of biocapacity directly and through its interaction with subsoil assets. Our findings corroborate the predictions of the model, revealing that subsoil resources tend to promote extractives (mining) FDI and hurt non-extractives (non-mining) FDI, whereas biocapacity tends to decrease all types of FDI inflows. Strong evidence in favor of the FDI natural resource curse is observed for low-income and high-income countries. Importantly, our empirical results reinforce that biocapacity protection can play a critical role in mitigating this curse.
format text
author Doytch, Nadia
Elheddad, Mohamed
Perez-Sebastian, Fidel
author_facet Doytch, Nadia
Elheddad, Mohamed
Perez-Sebastian, Fidel
author_sort Doytch, Nadia
title New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI
title_short New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI
title_full New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI
title_fullStr New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI
title_full_unstemmed New Climate Policy, Resource Abundance, and Sectoral FDI
title_sort new climate policy, resource abundance, and sectoral fdi
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2025
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/asog-pubs/314
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eneco.2025.108362
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