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FDI flows to developing economies drop to lowest level since 2005, says World Bank 

By Stanley Onyeka, Lagos

Flows of foreign direct investment (FDI) into developing economies—a key propellant of economic growth and higher living standards—have dwindled to the lowest level since 2005 amid rising trade and investment barriers, new research from the World Bank shows.

These barriers, the bank said, pose a significant threat to global efforts to mobilize financing for development. 

In 2023, the latest year for which data are available, developing economies received just $435 billion in FDI—the lowest level since 2005.

That coincides with a global trend in which FDI flows into advanced economies have also slowed to a trickle: high-income economies received just $336 billion in 2023, the lowest level since 1996.

As a share of their GDP, FDI inflows to developing economies in 2023 were just 2.3%, about half the number during the peak year of 2008. 

“What we’re seeing is a result of public policy,” said Indermit Gill, the World Bank Group’s Chief Economist and Senior Vice President. “It’s not a coincidence that FDI is plumbing new lows at the same time that public debt is reaching record highs.

“Private investment will now have to power economic growth, and FDI happens to be one of the most productive forms of private investment.

“Yet, in recent years, governments have been busy erecting barriers to investment and trade when they should be deliberately taking them down. They will have to ditch that bad habit.” 

The new analysis from the World Bank highlights the policies that will be needed to achieve those goals at a time when economic growth has slowed to a crawl, public debt has surged to record highs, and foreign-aid budgets have shrunk.

Reversing this slowdown is not just an economic imperative—it’s essential for job creation, sustained growth, and achieving broader development goals.

Easing investment restrictions

It maintained that easing investment restrictions will be a key first step: so far in 2025, half of all FDI-related measures announced by governments in developing economies have been restrictive measures—the highest share since 2010. 

“With the global community gearing up for the Conference on Financing for Development, the sharp drop in FDI to developing economies should sound alarm bells,” said M. Ayhan Kose, the World Bank Group’s Deputy Chief Economist and Director of the Prospects Group.

“Reversing this slowdown is not just an economic imperative—it’s essential for job creation, sustained growth, and achieving broader development goals. It will require bold domestic reforms to improve the business climate and decisive global cooperation to revive cross-border investment.” 

According to the report, in 2023, FDI accounted for roughly half of the external financing flows received by developing economies.

It noted that under the right conditions, it is a strong spur to economic growth: analysis of data from 74 developing economies between 1995 and 2019 suggests that a 10% increase in FDI inflows generates a 0.3% increase in real GDP after three years.

Meanwhile, FDI tends to be concentrated in the largest economies. Between 2012 and 2023, about two-thirds of FDI flows to developing economies went to just 10 countries, with China receiving nearly a third of the total and Brazil and India receiving roughly 10% and 6% respectively.

The 26 poorest countries received barely 2% of the total. Advanced economies, moreover, accounted for nearly 90% of the total FDI in developing economies over the past decade.

About half of that came from just two sources: the European Union and the United States. 

Against this backdrop, the report identifies three policy priorities for developing economies: 

  • Redouble efforts to attract FDI by easing FDI restrictions that have accumulated over the last decade would be a good start as well as speeding up improvements in the investment climate, which have stalled in many countries over the past decade.
  • Amplify the economic benefits of FDI by promoting trade integration, improving the quality of institutions, fostering human capital development, and encouraging more people to participate in the formal economy increase the benefits of FDI.

Advance global cooperation in which all countries should work together to accelerate policy initiatives that can help direct FDI flows to developing economies with the largest investment gaps. Especially in a time of high geopolitical tensions, the World Bank and other international institutions have a crucial role to play in supporting a rules-based order.

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