A Faustian bargain or just a good bargain? Chinese foreign direct investment and politics in Europe

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Abstract

This article explores the political challenges posed by the recent influx of Chinese outward foreign direct investment (OFDI) into the European Union (EU), which has become in 2011 the top destination for Chinese investment in the world. The central political question facing European states welcoming the influx of Chinese capital is whether this is a good bargain-a positive-sum game where both investor and investee benefit-or instead a Faustian bargain-a zero-sum game in the long term where capital is accompanied by implicit conditionality affecting European norms and policies, from human rights to labor laws. The novelty of Chinese FDI has the potential to affect politics in Europe in three different venues: inside European countries, between European countries, and between Europe and third countries. This article, whose main goal is to launch a research agenda on the political implications of Chinese FDI, explores in turn its potential impact on foreign and domestic policy, institutional process within the EU, and transatlantic relations. © 2014 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.

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Meunier, S. (2014). A Faustian bargain or just a good bargain? Chinese foreign direct investment and politics in Europe. Asia Europe Journal, 12(1–2), 143–158. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10308-014-0382-x

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