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Number 3, February 2008
The Globalization of U.S. Business Investment
Mark A. Wynne and Erasmus K. Kersting
Complete Issue 
Abstract
This paper documents some key facts about foreign direct investment
flows by U.S. businesses overseas and foreign businesses in the United
States. We show how the pattern of flows has evolved, examine the
sources and destination of these flows, document associated employment
and productivity gains, and show how investment-related sales compare
with traditional exports. While the United States is a net debtor to the
rest of the world, direct investment overseas by U.S. businesses exceeds
direct investment in the U.S. by foreign businesses. Furthermore, U.S.
businesses seem to earn more on their foreign investments than foreign
firms earn on their U.S. investments. The globalization of business investment
is a long-standing phenomenon, but it has accelerated in recent years
and become a source of concern for some, as it is intimately related to
the debate on offshore outsourcing. Yet contrary to what some think, the
bulk of U.S. investment overseas is in other high-income countries. And
foreign investment in the U.S. has been an important source of employment
growth in recent years.
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