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  1. Strengthening the development impact of UNCTAD's investment policy reviews
    research project on behalf of the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development
    Published: 2005
    Publisher:  DIE, Bonn

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    Content information
    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Book
    Format: Print
    ISBN: 9783889852885; 3889852882
    DDC Categories: 327
    Series: Discussion paper / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik ; 2005,5
    Subjects: Auslandsinvestition; Investitionslenkung; Staatliche Investitionspolitik; Entwicklung
    Other subjects: (stw)Auslandsinvestition; (stw)Investitionspolitik; (stw)Entwicklung; (stw)Welt; (stw)Entwicklungsländer; (thesoz)Entwicklungspolitik; (thesoz)Investitionspolitik; (thesoz)Direktinvestition; (thesoz)UNCTAD; (thesoz)Auslandsinvestition; Graue Literatur; Gutachten
    Scope: 18 S., 30 cm
  2. The returns on public investment
    concepts, evidence and policy challenges
  3. China and the global governance of foreign direct investment
    the emerging liberal bilateral investment treaty approach
  4. Strengthening the development impact of UNCTAD's investment policy reviews
    Published: 2005

    Abstract: "1. IPRs can be a very useful instrument for making FDI policy more effective for the development process. 2. IPRs should not focus exclusively on foreign direct investment but rather on investment in general and consider FDI as one of... more

     

    Abstract: "1. IPRs can be a very useful instrument for making FDI policy more effective for the development process. 2. IPRs should not focus exclusively on foreign direct investment but rather on investment in general and consider FDI as one of several elements in the development process. 3. UNCTAD should, in accord with donor countries, take a greater say in the selection of the countries reviewed. The starting point should be an analysis of the absorption capacity and the need for external assistance in the countries in question. 4. In view of widely differing domestic capacities and different needs for and institutional policy advice, UNCTAD should undertake more efforts to adapt the volume of issues covered to the advice actually needed. Activities could extend from Quick Response Window action on one or few specific problems to an "IPR light" or a full-fledged IPR. 5. Recommendations should be based more on investors' and non-investors' experiences and assessments than on a formal inve

     

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    Source: Union catalogues
    Language: English
    Media type: Ebook
    Format: Online
    ISBN: 3889852882
    Other identifier:
    oai:gesis.izsoz.de:document/11713
    DDC Categories: 327
    Series: DIE Discussion Paper ; Bd. 5/2005
    Subjects: Auslandsinvestition; Investitionslenkung; Staatliche Investitionspolitik; Entwicklung
    Other subjects: (stw)Auslandsinvestition; (stw)Investitionspolitik; (stw)Entwicklung; (stw)Welt; (stw)Entwicklungsländer; (thesoz)Entwicklungspolitik; (thesoz)Investitionspolitik; (thesoz)Direktinvestition; (thesoz)UNCTAD; (thesoz)Auslandsinvestition; Graue Literatur; Gutachten
    Scope: Online-Ressource, 18 S.
    Notes:

    Veröffentlichungsversion

  5. China and the global governance of foreign direct investment: the emerging liberal bilateral investment treaty approach
    Author: Berger, Axel
    Published: 2008

    Abstract: "The economic and political rise of China has led to considerable controversy regarding potential repercussions for the current global governance architecture. At least two opposing scenarios are conceivable: China's adaptation to the rules... more

     

    Abstract: "The economic and political rise of China has led to considerable controversy regarding potential repercussions for the current global governance architecture. At least two opposing scenarios are conceivable: China's adaptation to the rules and norms system shaped by developed countries or the pursuit of a distinctive policy approach, a possibility that involves the danger of clashing regulatory policies. A recent and increasingly dynamic trend giving substance to the phenomenon of China's rising importance is the growth of outward foreign direct investments (OFDI) by Chinese enterprises. Against this background, the present paper investigates the evolution and change of Chinese international investment policy-making, with a particular focus on bilateral investment treaties (BITs) as the most important legal instrument for the governance of global foreign direct investment (FDI) flows. China has been a committed signatory of BITs since the early 1980s (120 treaties up to 2007). It

     

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  6. The returns on public investment: concepts, evidence and policy challenges