Jack D. Glen - Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries: Statistics for 1970-96
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Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries: Statistics for 1970-96
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The ninth edition of Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries provides private and public investment data through 1996. This years edition includes information about levels of investment in the G4 countries and about domestic capital markets as sources of finance for investment. There is great variation in the level of investment in the G4. Regarding domestic capital markets, while stock and bond markets have grown rapidly since 1980, they remain rather unimportant in most developing countries as sources of finance for private investment. This years edition includes statistics for four major OECD countries for comparison with developing country trends. It also includes a discussion of domestic capital markets in financing private investment; even though stock and bond markets have grown at a rapid rate, they play only a minor role in financing investment in the developing countries where banks are a more important source of financing.
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No. 1 Private Business in Developing Countries: Improved Prospects. Guy P. Pfeffermann
No. 2 Debt-Equity Swaps and Foreign Direct Investment in Latin America. Joel Bergsman and Wayne Edisis
No. 3 Prospects for the Business Sector in Developing Countries. Economics Department, IFC
No. 4 Strengthening Health Services in Developing Countries through the Private Sector. Charles C. Griffin
No. 5 The Development Contribution of IFC Operations. Economics Department, IFC
No. 6 Trends in Private Investment in Thirty Developing Countries. Guy P. Pfeffermann and Andrea Madarassy
No. 7 Automotive Industry Trends and Prospects for Investment in Developing Countries. Yannis Karmokolias
No. 8 Exporting to Industrial Countries: Prospects for Businesses in Developing Countries. Economics Department, IFC
No. 9 African Entrepreneurs-Pioneers of Development. Keith Marsden
No. 10 Privatizing Telecommunications Systems: Business Opportunities in Developing Countries. William W. Ambrose, Paul R. Hennemeyer, and Jean-Paul Chapon
No. 11 Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries, 1990-91 edition. Guy P. Pfeffermann and Andrea Madarassy
No. 12 Financing Corporate Growth in the Developing World. Economics Department, IFC
No. 13 Venture Capital: Lessons from the Developed World for the Developing Markets. Silvia B. Sagari with Gabriela Guidotti
No. 14 Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries, 1992 edition. Guy P. Pfeffermann and Andrea Madarassy
No. 15 Private Sector Electricity in Developing Countries: Supply and Demand. Jack D. Glen
No. 16 Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries 1993: Statistics for 1970-91. Guy P. Pfeffermann and Andrea Madarassy
No. 17 How Firms in Developing Countries Manage Risk. Jack D. Glen
No. 18 Coping with Capitalism: The New Polish Entrepreneurs. Bohdan Wyznikiewicz, Brian Pinto, and Maciej Grabowski
No. 19 Intellectual Property Protection, Foreign Direct Investment, and Technology Transfer. Edwin Mansfield
No. 20 Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries 1994: Statistics for 1970-92. Robert Miller and Mariusz Sumlinski
(Continued on the inside back cover.)
title
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Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries : Statistics for 1970-96 Discussion Paper (International Finance Corporation) ; No. 34
Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries
Statistics for 1970-96
DISCUSSION PAPER NUMBER 34
Jack D. Glen Mariusz A. Sumlinski
Page ii
Copyright 1998 The World Bank and International Finance Corporation 1818 H Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A.
All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing May 1998
The International Finance Corporation (IFC), an affiliate of the World Bank, promotes the economic development of its member countries through investment in the private sector. It is the world's largest multilateral organization providing financial assistance directly in the form of loan and equity to private enterprises in developing countries.
To present the results of research with the least possible delay, the typescript of this paper has not been prepared in accordance with the procedures appropriate to formal printed texts, and the IFC and the World Bank accept no responsibility for errors. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the author and should not be attributed in any manner to the IFC or the World Bank or to members of their Board of Executive Directors or the countries they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this publication and accepts no responsibility whatsoever for any consequence of their use. Some sources cited in this paper may be informal documents that are not readily available.
The material in this publication is copyrighted. Requests for permission to reproduce portions of it should be sent to the Office of the Publisher, at the address shown in the copyright notice above. The World Bank encourages dissemination of its work and will normally give permission promptly and, when the reproduction is for noncommercial purposes, without asking a fee. Permission to copy portions for classroom use is granted through the Copyright Clearance Center, Inc., Suite 910, 222 Rosewood Drive, Danvers, Massachusetts 01923, U.S.A.
ISSN (IFC Discussion Papers): 1012-8069 ISSN (Trends in Private Investment in Developing Countries): 1018-208X ISBN 0-8213-4232-0
Jack D. Glen is lead economist and Mariusz A. Simlinski is a research analyst in the Economics Department of IFC.
The first edition of this serial publication was cataloged by the Library of Congress as follows:
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
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