Does China's outward direct investment improve the institutional quality of the belt and road countries?

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Abstract

This article investigates the effects of China's outward direct investment (ODI) on the institutional quality of the Belt and Road (B&R) countries. Based on a panel data set of 63 B&R countries during the period 2003 to 2016, we find that China's ODI improves the institutional quality of B&R countries not only in the short run but also in the long run. Further, although China's ODI exerts no differential impacts on host country institutional dimensions of "control of corruption, " "government effectiveness, " and "political stability" in countries with different natural resource endowments, it improves their institutional dimensions of "regulatory quality" and "rule of law, " implying that China's ODI may help the host B&R countries minimize the "resource curse". As one of the most important strategies for China's opening-up development in the current era, the B&R initiative serves as means to promote sustainable development of B&R countries. The article therefore contributes to existing scholarship on the institutional effects of China's ODI and sheds light on the mechanisms that drive sustainable development.

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Pan, C., Wei, W. X., Muralidharan, E., Liao, J., & Andreosso-O’Callaghan, B. (2020). Does China’s outward direct investment improve the institutional quality of the belt and road countries? Sustainability (Switzerland), 12(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/SU12010415

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