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The Internationalization of Corporate R&D

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THE INTERNATIONALIZATION OF CORPORATE R&DChinese pr<strong>of</strong>essional overseas account for a significant portion <strong>of</strong> the FDI flowing intoChina, and they comprise a large number <strong>of</strong> the key personalities in China’s scientificcommunity, including national chief scientists. This group has also founded many <strong>of</strong>the country’s high-tech companies, and they have “played a predominant role in all <strong>of</strong>China’s prestige scientific projects such as the space programme and human genomemapping” (Financial Express 2005).Overall, China’s investments in knowledge (which have grown at an unprecedentedrate during the past ten years), combined with its policies for attracting knowledgeresources from abroad (both in terms <strong>of</strong> corporate R&D functions and human capital),reflect a clear and strong determination to strengthen China’s innovative capacity. Atthe same time, China’s innovation system suffers important shortcomings and Chinastill lags behind more developed countries in terms <strong>of</strong> knowledge outputs. In the followingsections we examine more closely two key instruments in China’s pursuit tobecome an innovation country: FDI and R&D activities by foreign companies.10.3 Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in China10.3.1 One <strong>of</strong> the Largest FDI RecipientsAttracting FDI has been a cornerstone <strong>of</strong> the Chinese open door policy, introduced in1978, and has played an instrumental role in the transformation <strong>of</strong> the Chinese economy(see for example Long 2005 and OECD 2005b). While FDI inflows were relativelymodest in the 1980s, they increased dramatically in the early 1990s. Since then,FDI has been pouring into China, attracted by stable macroeconomic conditions, aswell as fiscal and other incentives, such as the provision <strong>of</strong> physical and institutionalinfrastructure, and the huge emerging domestic market. 8 Gradual liberalization <strong>of</strong> foreigninvestment and ownership restrictions have also contributed to a continued increasein FDI flows, thus briefly making China the largest FDI recipient in the world in2002/2003.In 2004, China attracted 61 billion dollars, or approximately 10 percent <strong>of</strong> total FDIinflows worldwide, making it the third-largest recipient after the U.S. and the U.K.(UNCTAD 2005b) (see Figure 10-2). According to <strong>The</strong> Economist, “[n]o other countryattracts as much FDI as China,” (<strong>The</strong> Economist 2005b).China’s FDI figures are likely to be overstated due to a practice known as “roundtripping,”whereby significant sums <strong>of</strong> money are taken out <strong>of</strong> China and then brought inagain as “foreign investment.” Investors therefore benefit from China’s preferential policiesfor FDI. According to some estimates, roundtripping accounts for around 20–308 For an analysis <strong>of</strong> capital inflows into China, see Prasad & Wei (2005).237

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