FDI FLOWS TO TRANSITION ECONOMIES ARE SET TO RECOVER IN 2010: FOREIGN BANKS PLAY A DOMINANT ROLE IN THE FINANCIAL SECTOR

Chisinau, 3 August 2010 - The World Investment Report 2010, estimates that FDI inflows worldwide plummeted by 37% to $1,114 billion in 2009 – following a 16% decline in 2008. After this freefall, a timid and uneven recovery appears on its way, thanks to better corporate profits and improved economic and financial conditions. According to a newly introduced quarterly index, global FDI inflows have shown renewed dynamism

Foreign direct investment (FDI) flows to the transition economies of South-East Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) are expected to increase moderately in 2010 on the back of higher commodity prices and faster economic recovery in large commodity-exporting countries (Kazakhstan, the Russian Federation and Ukraine) (table 1).

The Report reveals that FDI inflows to the region declined by 43%, to $70 billion in 2009 as the economic and financial crisis reduced foreign investors’ confidence in the strength of the region’s economies, and investment plans were scaled down or postponed.

In the CIS, all resource-based economies suffered from major drops in their FDI inflows in 2009. A fall in the demand for, and the price of, the main export commodities of the CIS led to that sharp decline in FDI flows to the subregion. FDI to the region’s largest economy, the Russian Federation, almost halved, mainly due to sluggish growth of the economy and local demand, diminishing returns of natural-resource-related projects in the country and the drying-up of round-tripping FDI. The region’s second largest economy, Ukraine, saw its FDI inflows shrink by more than half in 2009 as it was hit strongly by the global financial crisis. In turn, the decline in Kazakhstan was modest, as the country continued to be attractive for hydrocarbon projects. These three countries continued to occupy the three top positions as recipients in 2009 (figure 1). Moldova reported a dramatic decrease in FDI, from 708 million dollars in 2008 to 86 million last year. The downturn is mainly due to the effects of the global economic crisis that also affected the region.

 

FDI in Eastern Europe’s banking has been on the rise since the early 2000s, fuelled by restructuring and privatization. As a result, in 2008, 90% of banking assets in South-East Europe were owned by foreign banks (figure 2). The latter have played a generally positive role during the global financial crisis. The recent Greek debt crisis, however, is reviving concerns that the large presence of foreign banks could channel systemic risks to the subregion. In Moldova the share of foreign investments in the banks’ capital raised more than ten per cent in 2008 and is 77,26% as of July 30, 2010.

The 16% contraction of outward FDI from the region, to $51 billion, was not as severe as the decline in inflows. Transnational corporations from the Russian Federation ─ by far the largest investor from the region (figure 1) ─ continued to acquire strategic assets, mainly in petrochemicals, in developed countries.

Most of the recent policy measures in the region concerned investment promotion, including by simplifying business registration (e.g. Moldova and particular countries in Central Asia), reducing restrictions for foreign currency transactions (e.g. Kazakhstan) or improving conditions in special economic zones (e.g. Russian Federation).  

 

The World Investment Report and its database are available online at http://www.unctad.org/wir, http://www.unctad.org/fdistatistics and http://www.unctad.org/diae .

 

Table 1. South-East Europe and CIS: FDI flows in selected countries, 2009-2010, by quarter
(Millions of dollars)


Source: UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2010

 


Figure 1. Transition economies: top 5 recipients and sources of FDI flows, 2008, 2009a
(Billions of dollars)
a) Inflows

b) Outflows

Source: UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2010.

a  Ranked on the basis of the magnitude of 2009 FDI flows.

Figure 2. Share of foreign banks in total bank assets in South-East Europe, 2002 and 2008
(Per cent)

 

Source: UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2010.