92
AFRICA
’
S SILK ROAD
:
CHINA
AND INDIA’
S NEW ECONOMIC FRONTIER
in China is much higher than it is in Africa. The multiplier effect of FDI is the amount of additional income that one FDI dollar can generate in the host economy. FDI invested in the light manufacturing sector typically has much larger multiplier effects than FDI invested in the extractive sector. While FDI is
resources-oriented in Africa, it is manufacturing-oriented in China. FDI as a percent of GDP has been declining in China even though the absolute level of
FDI has been increasing. This indicates that GDP grows at apace
that can outweigh FDI growth, very possibly as a result of both a high multiplier effect of
FDI and complementary high domestic investment.
In comparison, FDI as a percent of GDP has been increasing rapidly in Africa,
indicating that GDPgrows at a much slower pace than FDI inflows, possibly as a result of a low multiplier effect and low complementary domestic investment.
FIGURE 2.21
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