Global tensions hit investments again in 2023: UN

1175

GENEVA (AFP) – Worldwide foreign direct investment fell for a second consecutive year in 2023 amid a global economic slowdown, coupled with swelling trade and geopolitical tensions, the United Nations (UN) said yesterday.

Foreign direct investment (FDI) fell by two per cent to USD1.3 trillion last year, according to a fresh report from the UN Trade and Development agency.

But excluding a few exceptions, the report showed a far sharper decline of more than 10 per cent in FDI for the second consecutive year, it cautioned.

UNCTAD said the prospects for FDI remained “challenging” in 2024, but highlighted some positive developments.

It cited the easing of financial conditions and concerted efforts towards investment facilitation, “a prominent feature of national policies and international agreements”.

“We think that 2024 will be better,” UNCTAD chief Rebeca Grynspan told reporters in Geneva.

“There are signs that there will be a modest growth 2024,” she said.

“It’s a modest growth, but it’s a change of tendency, and so we are more optimistic towards 2024.”

A street vendor sells toys in the Jabalia camp for Palestinian refugees in the northern Gaza Strip. PHOTO: AFP

Falling direct investment hurts developing countries in particular, because it tends to be their largest external source of financing.

Last year, FDI flows to developing countries fell by seven per cent, to USD867 billion, UNCTAD said, reflecting an eight-percent decrease to developing countries in Asia.

Flows to Africa meanwhile slumped three per cent, to USD53 billion.

But UNCTAD highlighted that the continent was attracting “a growing share of global mega projects, with six valued at more than USD5 billion”.

The largest greenfield announcement for any country in 2023 was a green hydrogen project in Mauritania, expected to generate USD34 billion in investment, the agency said, pointing out that that was “several multiples of the country’s gross domestic product”.

As for FDI flows to developed countries, they were heavily impacted by the financial transactions of multinational enterprises, UNCTAD said.

This was “partly due to efforts to implement a global minimum tax rate on the profits of these corporations”, it said.

Inflows to most parts of Europe and North America were down by 14 per cent and five per cent respectively, the report showed.