The Affinity of Foreign Investors for Authoritarian Regimes
- 1 September 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Political Research Quarterly
- Vol. 47 (3) , 565-588
- https://doi.org/10.1177/106591299404700302
Abstract
Military coups in Argentina, Brazil, and Chile in the 1960s and 1970s cast doubt on the liberals' belief that democracy and economic development are mutually reenforcing. Indeed, Guillermo O'Donnell and other radicals argued that democracy was inconsistent with the requirements for develop ment within the strictures of international capitalism. Strong and weak ver sions of the radical thesis linking authoritarian regimes to the interests of multinational corporations are tested by analyzing the flow and profitability of U.S. foreign direct investment. Do multinationals benefit materially from autocratic regimes? Pooled cross-sectional and time-series regression analyses of 48 countries, 1950-85, indicate that U.S. multinational corporations have fared best in the developed democracies; but rates of return in the periphery have been greater under authoritarian regimes. Investment flows have not been significantly related to regime type.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Safeguarding or international morality? The behavior of multinational corporations in less developed countries, 1975–86International Interactions, 1991
- Birds of a FeatherJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1991
- Taxes, Tariffs and Transfer Pricing in Multinational Corporate Decision MakingThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1991
- A NEW SET OF INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS OF REAL PRODUCT AND PRICE LEVELS ESTIMATES FOR 130 COUNTRIES, 1950–1985Review of Income and Wealth, 1988
- Hegemony, imperialism, and the profitability of foreign investmentsInternational Organization, 1988
- Economic Dependence and Political DemocracyComparative Political Studies, 1988
- Dependent Economic Development, Aid Dependence on the United States, and Democratic Breakdown in the Third WorldInternational Studies Quarterly, 1985
- The Impact of Bureaucratic-Authoritarian Rule on Economic GrowthComparative Political Studies, 1985
- Legitimacy, Institutionalization, and Opposition in Exclusionary Bureaucratic-Authoritarian Regimes: The Situation of the 1980sComparative Politics, 1984
- Capitalism, bureaucratic authoritarianism, and prospects for democracy in the United StatesInternational Organization, 1982