Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Preface
- The Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 China's Regional Economic Development: An Overview
- 2 New Trends in China's Regional Economic Development
- 3 Regional Economic Development in China: Agglomeration and Relocation
- 4 Cost Impact and Industrial Upgrading in Pearl River Delta Region: Case Study on Shenzhen and Dongguan
- 5 Development of Pearl River Delta as a Mega-city Region
- 6 Comparing Two Economic Regions: Indonesia-Malaysia-Singapore Growth Triangle and Pearl River Delta Region
- 7 Shanghai and Yangtze River Delta: A Revolving Relationship
- 8 Recent Developments in Yangtze River Delta and Singapore's Investment
- 9 Bohai Rim's Regional Development: Problems and Policy Options
- 10 Qingdao's New Development Strategies
- 11 Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-city: Features of a Model of Sustainable Living
- 12 FDI, Capital Formation, and Economic Growth of Western China: A Comparison Across Three Regions
- 13 Chongqing's Development Strategy and Its Role in China's Development
- 14 Regions with Net Outward Migration: Issues and Challenges
- Index
12 - FDI, Capital Formation, and Economic Growth of Western China: A Comparison Across Three Regions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Preface
- The Contributors
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 China's Regional Economic Development: An Overview
- 2 New Trends in China's Regional Economic Development
- 3 Regional Economic Development in China: Agglomeration and Relocation
- 4 Cost Impact and Industrial Upgrading in Pearl River Delta Region: Case Study on Shenzhen and Dongguan
- 5 Development of Pearl River Delta as a Mega-city Region
- 6 Comparing Two Economic Regions: Indonesia-Malaysia-Singapore Growth Triangle and Pearl River Delta Region
- 7 Shanghai and Yangtze River Delta: A Revolving Relationship
- 8 Recent Developments in Yangtze River Delta and Singapore's Investment
- 9 Bohai Rim's Regional Development: Problems and Policy Options
- 10 Qingdao's New Development Strategies
- 11 Sino-Singapore Tianjin Eco-city: Features of a Model of Sustainable Living
- 12 FDI, Capital Formation, and Economic Growth of Western China: A Comparison Across Three Regions
- 13 Chongqing's Development Strategy and Its Role in China's Development
- 14 Regions with Net Outward Migration: Issues and Challenges
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
Despite its fast economic growth in the past thirty years, China still faces the problem of regional disparity. While the east has a much more energetic and developed economy than the west, the middle is somewhere between them. Generally, in the east, the middle or the west, there is a significantly positive relationship between capital formation and economic growth. In the meanwhile, the development of the economy has improved the environments for capital formation. However, the inadequate capital formation ability of the west is the key factor restricting the development of its economy, so the improvement of its capital formation ability will help reduce the regional disparity. This chapter will analyse the ability for capital formation and its impact on regional economic development in the west and compare it with the east and the middle.
This chapter is related to studies that analyse the relationship between FDI and economic growth. Zhong (2000) showed that there was indeed a relationship between FDI and the economic growth in certain provinces. However, FDI was not the most significant variable that influenced economic growth; in addition, he found that the impact of FDI on the economy was decreasing from the coastland to the middle and the west. Sang (2002) found that FDI did prompt economic growth but its role was limited. Wu and Chen (2003) stated that FDI was the important factor that influenced economic growth through technology spillover and network effect of regional innovation. Zhang (2004) used the data of twenty-eight provinces from 1984 to 2002 to analyse the influence of FDI on Chinese economic growth. He found that the elastic coefficient of FDI to economic growth was 0.02–0.03, that is, if the FDI increased by 1 per cent, the economy would increase by 0.02–0.03 per cent. Du (2004) demonstrated that the external capital formation ability in terms of FDI played a positive role in economic growth, and the growth of the Chinese economy was one of the major reasons for the increase of the FDI.
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- Regional Economic Development in China , pp. 260 - 276Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2009