Abstract
This paper examines the impact of outward FDI on human capital, gross capital formation, inflation, trade openness, and economic growth of BRICS countries over the period 1985–2017. In order to measure the outward FDI impact upon the set of regressors and to find out short vs long run relationship, we have used the familiar Fisher and Johansen’s Co-integration tests, and vector-error correction model. Empirical results exhibit that outward FDI has a positive impact on human capital during the short run, whereas in the long run this impact is quite insignificant. Furthermore, results exhibit that outward FDI has substantially raised the economic growth of BRICS countries both in short and long run. Moreover, panel causality result reveals that there is a bidirectional relationship between outward FDI and human capital, indicating that if there is an improvement in the quality of skilled labour through education, it would facilitate to raise the outward investment.
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Notes on contributors
Saileja Mohanty
Saileja Mohanty is a Research Scholar (PhD) in Economics at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, National Institute of Technology (NIT) Rourkela, Odisha, India. Her area of research is Macro and Open-economics particularly in Foreign Direct Investment.
Narayan Sethi
Narayan Sethi is an Associate Professor of Economics at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, National Institute of Technology (NIT) Rourkela, India. His publications include four books and 12 papers both in national and international journals such as energy policy, economic analysis and policy, and international journal of social economics.