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Published in: Journal of Chinese Political Science 2/2020

07-09-2019 | Research Article

Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and Territorial Disputes between Adversarial States: Implications for Tsai Ing-wen’s “New Southbound Policy” and Taiwan’s Approach to Territorial Disputes in the South China Sea

Author: Kelan (Lilly) Lu

Published in: Journal of Chinese Political Science | Issue 2/2020

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Abstract

This study examines whether the pacifying effect of foreign direct investment (FDI) on territorial disputes between adversarial dyads is conditional upon the dyads’ past experience of military cooperation. I built a political economy model and conducted a logistic regression analysis on the newly coded bilateral FDI data between adversarial dyads and the existing dataset by merging the rivalry data established by Thompson [51] and the territorial disputes data collected by Lee and Mitchell [42]. I found that when bilateral FDI flows between adversarial dyads reach a certain level the pacifying effect of FDI is stronger for adversarial dyads with past military cooperation. I also found that while past military cooperation has a pacifying effect in general, past military cooperation that occurred more recently has a stronger pacifying effect than those that occurred a while ago. Moreover, based upon the theoretical model and empirical findings in this paper, I investigated the political implications for Tsai Ing-wen’s “New Southbound Policy” and Taiwan’s approach to the territorial dispute issues in the South China Sea.

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Footnotes
1
According to Correlation of War (COW), a conflict is characterized as a militarized interstate dispute if casualties are less than 1000 and military force is deployed.
 
2
In spite of the higher risks, states do occasionally invest in their adversaries with territorial disputes. For example, American firms have invested in Cuba in spite of their adversarial attitude toward each other with long-term territorial disputes. Similarly, in spite of the long-term adversarial relationship and territorial disputes between China and Japan, the investment between them has been increasing dramatically over the past several decades.
 
3
See Cambridge Dictionary. https://​dictionary.​cambridge.​org/​dictionary/​english/​rivalry. Accessed on May 20th, 2018.
 
4
The disruption hypothesis argues that interstate conflicts tend to cause interruptions of FDI flows.
 
5
In contrast to the conventional way of defining rivalries (such as [12, 24, 35]), Thompson [51] created a new approach to define rivalries by “systematizing historical perceptions about competitors, threats, and enemies” and finally created “a new dataset on 174 strategic rivalries”.
 
6
Due to the constraint of data availability, I coded this dependent variable by following Lee and Mitchell [42] and Huth and Allee [31]. In future studies when more data are available, I will explore some potentially more sophisticated approach to code this dependent variable, such as the extent of territorial claim involvement.
 
7
In order to create this variable, I first created a new variable—“yeardiff”—which measures how many years there are between the past military cooperation and the current year. In my dataset, if a previous military cooperation between this dyad occurred one year before the observation year (i.e., “t-1”), the value of “yeardiff” is 1. If a previous military cooperation between this dyad occurred X years before the observation year (i.e., “t-x”), the value of “yeardiff” is X. Then I created a new independent variable named “pacoop9”, which is coded as “1” if the military cooperation between the adversaries occurred less than 9 years ago; and “0” otherwise.
 
8
For robustness check, I ran the same empirical tests with 8-year and 10-year as a cutting point. The results are consistent with those with 9-year as a cutting point shown in this paper and are available upon request.
 
9
For robustness check, I ran the same empirical tests with 44-year and 46-year as a cutting point. The results are consistent with those with 45-year as a cutting point shown in this paper and are available upon request.
 
10
According to Table 5, the other adversarial dyad with maritime disputes that experienced military cooperation in the past is China and Vietnam. They protested the same enemy—Malaysia—in the year 1983 after the Malaysian commandos occupied Terumbu Layang Layang following the naval exercise by the Five Power Defense Agreement (FPDA) in the South China Sea involving military forces from Britain, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, and Malaysia.
 
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Metadata
Title
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and Territorial Disputes between Adversarial States: Implications for Tsai Ing-wen’s “New Southbound Policy” and Taiwan’s Approach to Territorial Disputes in the South China Sea
Author
Kelan (Lilly) Lu
Publication date
07-09-2019
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Journal of Chinese Political Science / Issue 2/2020
Print ISSN: 1080-6954
Electronic ISSN: 1874-6357
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11366-019-09635-w

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