Columbia International Affairs Online: Working Papers

CIAO DATE: 06/2014

Inward FDI in the United States and its policy context

Lucyna Kornecki

February 2013

Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment

Abstract

Inward foreign direct investment (IFDI) represents an integral part of the United States (U.S.) economy, with its stock growing from US $83 billion in 1980 to US $3.5 trillion in 2011. The United States, which had earlier been primarily a home for multinational enterprises (MNEs) rather than a host for affiliates of foreign MNEs, has become a preferred host country for FDI since the 1980s. Foreign MNEs have contributed robust flows of FDI into diverse industries of the U.S. economy, and total FDI inflows reached US $227 billion in 2011, equivalent to 15% of global inflows, the single largest share of any economy. Inflows of FDI, with a peak of US $314 billion in 2000 and another of US $306 billion in 2008, have been an important factor contributing to sustained economic growth in the United States. The recent financial and economic crises negatively impacted FDI flows to the United States and opened a period of major uncertainty. The effectiveness of government policy responses at both the national and international levels in addressing the financial crisis and its economic consequences will play a crucial role for creating favorable conditions for a rebound in FDI inflows.