FDI happens when a company or individual from one country invests directly in a business in another country. Think of it as a long‑term friendship: the investor builds a house (a factory, a store, or a service) and stays to manage it.
Mathematically, we can write it as \$FDI = \frac{\text{Investment}}{\text{GDP}}\$ to see how big the investment is relative to the country’s economy.
| Effect | Positive | Negative |
|---|---|---|
| Employment | ↑ Jobs, ↑ skills | Potential wage suppression if local workers are underpaid |
| Technology | New tech, training | Tech may be proprietary, limiting local use |
| Environment | Modern standards can reduce pollution | Rapid growth can strain resources |
Remember: Exams often ask you to weigh the pros and cons of FDI. Use the positive/negative table as a quick reference.
Use the PESTLE framework (Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Legal, Environmental) to structure your answer.
Include real‑world examples (e.g., China’s Belt & Road Initiative, India’s IT outsourcing) to show you understand the concepts.
When writing, start with a brief definition, then list benefits, followed by drawbacks, and finish with a balanced conclusion.