Apparent growth of inward investment to Ireland is largely a mirage
There has been much media attention recently to the
apparently very high inflows of foreign investment into Ireland. According to a report prepared for the
American Chamber of Commerce Ireland, US firms invested $129.5 billion in
Ireland over the five years to 2012, fourteen times the level of US investment
in China.
Meanwhile, the CSO has reported a total foreign direct investment
(FDI) inflow into Ireland of almost €30 billion in 2012 alone.
Yet employment in foreign firms here (most of which is
American) has been falling – by eight per cent between 2007-2011 according to
Forfás data – while sales have increased only marginally (by less than five per
cent). How can this be?
The main part of the answer lies in how statistics agencies
measure FDI flows. Thus, earnings of
foreign companies that are reported in an economy but are not taken out are
considered to be “reinvested earnings” (even though very little of it may be
directed to productive activity) and are counted as an inward investment
flow.
Last year, these earnings accounted for three quarters of
the total recorded FDI “inflow” into Ireland.
Most of these earnings actually originated abroad but were declared in
Ireland for tax purposes.
It is also instructive that almost 60% of this FDI inflow went
into financial activities (the bulk of it in financial intermediation) which
have little connection with the real world where people work in producing goods
and services.
According to The Irish
Times (October 4), the person who wrote the report for the American Chamber
stated that the investment in question was “real stuff…It is sticks in the
ground, money being used for goods and services”.
While there certainly is a significant amount of new
productive investment coming into the economy every year, the great bulk of the
FDI inflow does not match this description.
It is as much a mirage as the large proportion of exports by foreign
firms which consists of profits generated abroad and transferred to Ireland
through transfer price manipulation (rather than representing goods and
services produced in Ireland) and the large proportion of service inputs of
these firms which consists of arbitrarily-set royalty payments.
No comments:
Post a Comment