The Economic Growth Centre cordially invites you to a seminar by Mr Yong Wang 
Speaker : Mr Yong Wang
PhD Candidate
University of Chicago
Topic "Fiscal Decentralization, Endogenous Policies, and Technology Adoption: Theory and Evidence from China and India’s FDI"
Chairperson : Asst Prof Zhou Jie
Division of Economics
School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Date : Tuesday, 10 February 2009
Time : 10.30am - 11.30am
Venue : Executive Seminar Room 7 (S3.1-B1-11)
Nanyang Business School
Nanyang Technological University

 

 

 

About the Speaker:

Yong Wang is a PhD candidate in economics at the University of Chicago. He received his MA in Economics from Peking University and BA in International Economics from Fudan University. He served as consultant at the World Bank in summer of 2008. He won various awards at University of Chicago and Peking University. His areas of interest are in Political Economy, Growth and Development, Economic Theory and Macroeconomics.

Abstract:

A political economy model is developed to explain why two developing economies with the same economic fundamentals can have different de facto economic policies toward FDI (viewed as foreign better technology) and, as a result, receive starkly different amount of FDI inflows. Yong Wang shows how fiscal decentralization can have both a non-monotonic and dramatic impact on policies and FDI. Too much fiscal decentralization may hurt the incentives of the central government hence it would choose the policy profiles to induce the local governments to block FDI. Too little fiscal decentralization may render the local governments captured by the protectionist special interest group. The policies toward FDI are therefore sufficiently favorable only when fiscal decentralization is on some medium range. He shows that the equilibrium FDI may bifurcate because the local government’s induced preference for FDI could be endogenously polarized, consequently a small change in fiscal decentralization might diametrically shift the local government’s attitude, leading to dramatically different institutional entry cost imposed on FDI. The simulation/calibration results closely match China and India’s data for the macroeconomic and policy variables. Counterfactual experiments also indicate that the degree of fiscal decentralization can well explain China and India’s nine-fold difference in FDI per capita although these two economies are at the similar development stage.

Reservation:

Admission is free.  Please reply to Christina, e-mail: achristina@ntu.edu.sg or Tel: 6790-5689 to confirm your attendance.