Under One Roof: Supply Chains and the Protection of Foreign Investment

PSRUnder One Roof: Supply Chains and the Protection of Foreign Investment

Leslie Johns and Rachel L. Wellhausen

We argue that economic links, such as supply chains, can create a common roof that protects foreign investors in host countries that lack strong institutions to protect property rights. Supply chains link the activities of firms: when a host government breaks a contract with one firm, other firms in the supply chain are harmed. These partner firms therefore have incentive to protect one another’s property rights. This leads to the key implication of our argument: host governments are less likely to violate the property rights of firms that are more tightly linked with other firms in the host economy. We test our argument with cross-national data on investment arbitration, a survey of US multinational subsidiaries in Russia, and case studies from Azerbaijan. Our findings imply that one benefit of outsourcing in developing and transition economies is the creation of a network of partner firms that protect each other’s property rights.

[Read more]

American Political Science Review / Volume 110 / Issue 01 / February 2016, pp 31-5 / Copyright © American Political Science Association 2016