Gulf monetary aid and direct investment: tracking the implications of state capitalism, aid and investment flows

Key points

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Summary

Introduction

As a note on the variety of recipient countries: These 8 recipient countries vary significantly in their geography, their appeal to foreign investment, their extension and economic scale, their dependence and diversification of herbal resources and their strategic importance to external powers. Knowledge is a compilation of press reports, knowledge about government recipients and shipments, and foreign direct investment flows tracked through fDi Markets, a Financial Times company, all combined and available and downloadable on the AEI website. the era between 2003 and May 2020.

More importantly, comparative knowledge also shows how personal capital flows from the United States, the United Kingdom, and the European Union in combination to compete with capital flows from state capitalism’s resources such as China and the Gulf. The effects recommend that, through the demonstration of capital flows and the creation of more consistent tasks, capital investment from the US, the UK and the EU be a primary counter-force for growth, innovation, entrepreneurship, individualism and, hopefully, democracy as the “best facets of the flexible market capitalism”, as Joshualant Kurzick describes.

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Observations

1. Karen E. Young, “Gulf Financial Aid and Direct Investment Tracker”, American Enterprise Institute, August 2020, https://www.aei.org/multimedia/fadi-tracker.

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