Foreign Direct Investments in Serbia (Report)
Serbian Studies 2006, Summer-Fall, 20, 2
-
- £2.99
-
- £2.99
Publisher Description
1. Introduction What can a developing country reasonably expect from foreign direct investments? Do they promote economic growth and social development? Foreign direct investments are part of investment finance, alongside, mostly, domestic savings. Foreign direct investments (FDI) contribute to economic growth in their net amount: the amount that remains after repatriation of foreign capital and profits are taken into account. If FDI finance research and development or in some other way bring in the most recent technology, they can be an ingredient of another source of growth, called technical progress.
More Books Like This
Investing in Development
2021
FDI and Economic Growth in Developing Countries. A Cross Comparison between Egypt and Turkey’
2014
Foreign Ownership Restrictions and Liberalization Reforms
2019
International Business
2014
Foreign Direct Investment in Central and Eastern Europe
2018
Facilitating Transition by Internationalization
2019
More Books by Serbian Studies
The Kosovo Dilemma: Albanian war Concept vs. Serbian Peaceful Compromise (Report)
2006
Including the Serbs of Croatia Into Croatia's History Writing (Report)
2007
Voices of Remembrance: Borislav Pekic's Correspondence with Danilo Kis (Borislav Pekic and Danilo Kis) (Essay)
2006
Alterity, Violence, And History in Ivo Andric's Na Drini Cuprija (Report)
2006
Two Decades of Academic Debate: Western Scholarship and the Collapse of Yugoslavia (Essay)
2007
To Grieve Or Not to Grieve?: The Unsteady Representation of Violence in Ivo Andric's the Bridge on the Drina (Report)
2007