CIAO DATE: 11/2010
July 2010
Centre for European Policy Studies
Several policy-relevant issues regarding the EU’s bilateral investment treaties (BITS) are addressed in this paper. First and foremost, we explore the question of whether EU’s BITs have a significantly positive impact on outflows or not. Second, we ask the question which member states and which BIT partners have had a significant experience after the implementation of the BIT. In our sample we find that both OECD BITs and EU BITs have a statistically significant and positive impact on FDI outflows. This result is robust to the inclusion of variables such as privatisation proceeds that control for the level of economic reform, the level of trade linkages, the level of democratic freedom and a measure of risk of expropriation among other standard controls. We control for endogeneity in our estimations by using the fixed-effects estimator as our preferred estimator on a large panel dataset. We also test the strict exogeneity of our results by using a method suggested by Baier and Bergstrand (2007) and we find no feedback effect in our sample.
Resource link: Do the European Union's bilateral investment treaties matter? [PDF] - 282K