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The 2009 recession stiffened economic, financial, and business environment in the developed economies. This caused scarcity of funds available for investment abroad. The ensuing financial chaos also increased the skepticism of the multinationals concerning the loss of property in the developing nations. A Bilateral Investment Treaty (BIT) by imposing reciprocal protection of investment among the signatories shall reduce this uncertainty and encourage Foreign Direct Investment (FDI). The current research analyses BITs influence on inward FDI to the Middle East and North African (MENA) developing states. Multinational investment into a host developing economy is determined by the general FDI theoretical framework. Hence, BITs alone cannot be sufficient for attracting overseas investors. Thus, size of the host market, human capital and infrastructure availability, business facilitation, the openness of the economy, its economic/financial development, macroeconomic stability, and trade agreements etcetera are also considered. Exploiting annual observations for a panel of ten MENA nations from 1990 to 2016 the results through random effect panel method clearly manifest the importance of market size, level of economic and financial development, macroeconomic stability and bilateral investment treaties for overseas investors. The sway of a ratified BIT is found to be greater in comparison to just a signed BIT. On the contrary, trade agreements, availability of infrastructure and human capital, economic liberalization of the host etc. fails to significantly influence investors from abroad. A time trend employed to cover for any time increasing unobserved phenomenon equally affecting all the countries was also insignificant.

Mumtaz Hussain Shah. (2018) Bilateral Investment Treaties and Multinational Investors: Evidence from FDI in the MENA States, Paradigms , Vol 12, Issue 1.
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