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Business regulation, inward foreign direct investment, and economic growth in the new European Union member states

Allen, Matthew M.C.; Aldred, Maria L.

Authors

Matthew M.C. Allen

Dr Maria Allen M.L.Allen1@salford.ac.uk
Associate Dean Academic QA & Enhancement



Abstract

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to assess the extent to which institutional convergence has taken place in the new European Union (EU) member states. It does so by contrasting arguments that
are inspired by transaction-cost economics within the mainstream international-business literature and contentions within the comparative-capitalisms perspective. A corollary of arguments within
the former is that those countries that have less transparent ways of doing business will post poorer economic growth records than those with more predictable and less costly regulations. By contrast,
contentions within the comparative-capitalisms literature lead to expectations that a broader set of institutional factors will shape economic growth.

Design/methodology/approach – The article adopts a fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis approach to examine the necessary and sufficient causal conditions for economic growth in the region.

Findings – There is a great deal of institutional diversity within the new EU Central and Eastern Europe. There are no clusters of countries around a specific variety of capitalism or an economic model that has above-average economic growth rates and that is characterized by institutions that lower the costs of market transacting. This, in turn, suggests that convergence pressures are not as great as the mainstream international-business literature has argued.

Research limitations/implications – Future research could complement this study by adopting a cross-country, comparative micro- or firm-level approach to examine the ways in which different
institutional factors, both individually and collectively, shape the growth of businesses and consequently, economies.

Originality/value – Mainstream international business tends to focus on regulation and market-supporting institutions to explain growth in developing economies. This research has shown that a broader view of institutions needs to be adopted, as some countries have been able to post strong economic growth figures despite institutional environments that do not lower the costs of market-based contracting.

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jul 19, 2013
Deposit Date Feb 7, 2025
Journal Critical perspectives on international business
Print ISSN 1742-2043
Publisher Emerald
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 9
Issue 3
Pages 301-321
DOI https://doi.org/10.1108/17422041311330431