6533b83afe1ef96bd12a71f7

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Explaining German outward FDI in the EU: a reassessment using Bayesian model averaging and GLM estimators

Mariam CamareroLaura MontolioCecilio Tamarit

subject

Statistics and ProbabilityGeneralized linear modelFDI determinantsEconomics and Econometricsgravity modelsForeign direct investmentgermanyBayesian inferenceGermanMathematics (miscellaneous)Germany0502 economics and businessEconomicsEconometricsmedia_common.cataloged_instanceC13050207 economicsEuropean unionC33050205 econometrics media_commonEstimation05 social sciencesEstimatorUNESCO::CIENCIAS ECONÓMICASInvestment (macroeconomics)language.human_languageGravity modelsOutward FDIlanguageoutward FDIF21F23GLMSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)

description

The last decades have seen an increasing interest in FDI and the process of production fragmentation. This has been particularly important for Germany as the core of the European Union (EU) production hub. This paper attempts to provide a deeper under standing of the drivers of German outward FDI in the EU for the period 1996–2012 by tackling the two main challenges faced in the modelization of FDI, namely the variable selection problem and the choice of the estimation method. For that purpose, we first extend previous BMA analysis developed by Camarero et al. (Econ Model 83:326–345, 2019) by including country-pair-fixed effects to select the appropriate set of variables. Second, we compare several estimation methods in their multiplica tive form, namely four versions of the generalized linear model. The results of the empirical application indicate that Gamma pseudo-maximum likelihood is the best performing estimator. Furthermore, our results point to horizontal-ness as the primary strategy for German investment in core EU countries, while vertical-ness seems to prevail in peripheral EU countries.

10.1007/s00181-021-02040-4https://doi.org/10.1007/s00181-021-02040-4