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Global economic crisis and political unrest weigh on recovery of foreign direct investment in West Asia


Press Release
For use of information media - Not an official record
UNCTAD/PRESS/PR/2011/025
Global economic crisis and political unrest weigh on recovery of foreign direct investment in West Asia

Geneva, Switzerland, 26 July 2011

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The contents of this press release and the related Report must not be quoted or
summarized in the print, broadcast or electronic
media before 26 July 2011,17:00 [GMT]
(13:00 New York; 19:00 Geneva, 22:30 New Delhi, 02:00 - 27 July Tokyo)

Geneva, 26 July 2011 - FDI flows to West Asia in 2010 continued to be affected by the global economic crisis, decreasing by 12 per cent to $58 billion, despite the steady economic recovery registered in 2010 in most of economies of the region, says UNCTAD´s World Investment Report 2011 (1) (WIR11). While the recovery was underpinned by sizeable increases in oil-rich government spending, private investors´ response remained cautious, the annual survey reports.

The report, subtitled "Non-Equity Modes of International Production and Development", was released today.

The estimated value of greenfield FDI fell 42 per cent in 2009 and 44 per cent in 2010. Sales of cross-border mergers and acquisitions (M&A) were concentrated mainly in Turkey. Although they increased by 30 per cent in 2010, they remained at a low level at $4.6 billion as the privatization process in that country came to an end.

Trends in FDI inflows in 2010 varied by country (see figure 1). For example, they dropped 12 per cent in Saudi Arabia, where foreign investors have withdrawn from or frozen their involvement in a number of megaprojects in the petrochemical industry such as ConocoPhillips in the Yanbu project and Dow Chemicals in the Ras Tanura integrated project. They fell 32 per cent in Qatar, as the last of four liquid natural gas Qatargas plants that had bolstered FDI in 2009 was completed in 2010. In the United Arab Emirates, flows stayed at the same low level as in 2009 - when they plummeted to $4 billion due to the economic crisis. In Turkey, incoming FDI increased by 8 per cent mainly as a result of a 40 per cent increase in investment in real estate.

The report says that, according to preliminary data, FDI inflows are likely to bottom out in 2011. However, concerns about political instability in the region are likely to weigh on the recovery.

FDI outflows from West Asian economies declined significantly for the second consecutive year. They dropped 51 per cent in 2010 due to divestments by West Asian firms. The largest such disinvestment was the $10.7 billion sale by Zain Group (Kuwait) of its African operations to Bharti Airtel (India). At the same time, the estimated value of West Asian greenfield projects abroad dropped 52 per cent. As the region´s outward investment is driven mainly by government-controlled entities (table 1), the global economic crisis and political unrest are affecting outward investment by putting pressure on governments to direct more investment into their own economies and to finance higher social spending to pre-empt or respond to popular discontent.

Hitherto, however, governments of these countries have had a dual strategy for economic diversification policies that included investing in other Arab countries to compensate for the small size of their domestic economies, and in developed countries and emerging economies to improve or create capabilities in industries perceived as strategic for the development and diversification of their home economies. Increasingly, the latter strategy has been pursued in the industries still missing at home, such as motor vehicles, alternative energy, electronics and aerospace. This approach differs from the experiences of other countries that have generally sought to develop a certain level of capacity at home before engaging in outward FDI, the report says.

Long-term prospects for outward investment are positive on the whole, as expected high oil prices suggest that funds available for investment abroad will continue to rise. It is important, however, that governments of the region assess the performance and effectiveness of all aspects of their outward FDI strategies as an instrument for economic diversification and development, the study says.

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


ANNEX

Tables and figures

Figure 1. West Asia: top 5 recipients of FDI inflows, 2009-2010(Billions of dollars)

Figure 1. West Asia: top 5 recipients of FDI inflows, 2009-2010 (Billions of dollars)
Source: UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2011.

Table 1. West Asia: cross-border M&A purchases and greenfield outward FDI projects by ownership type and home economy, cumulative 2004-2010(Billions of dollars and per cent)

Table 1. West Asia: cross-border M&A purchases and greenfield outward FDI projects by ownership type and home economy, cumulative 2004-2010 (Billions of dollars and per cent)
Source: UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2011.