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516 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 8 (1991)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0516 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

Foreign investment in the United States has captured the attention of the
American media and public in recent years. Although the subject appeared to
burst upon the public consciousness during the 1980s, such investment, which
has many implications for the U.S. economy, is not new. The articles in this is-
sue of The Annals place foreign investment in a number of contexts important
to understanding what that investment is and how it affects the United States.
The first four articles concern the history and nature of foreign investment
in the United States. Mira Wilkins discusses the role of foreign investment in
the U.S. economy prior to 1914. Robert Eisner and Paul J. Pieper address prob-
lems with the measurement of both U.S. investment abroad and foreign in-
vestment in the United States together with some of the possible costs of that
investment. William A. Niskanen examines the reasons that the nation, which
had been a major net exporter of capital for several decades, became a net cap-
ital importer during the 1980s. Edward John Ray notes the sources and the in-
dustrial and geographic distribution of foreign direct investment in the United
States and analyzes the economic factors that determine that distribution.
William Helkie and Lois Stekler use an econometric model to simulate the
macroeconomic effects that restricting foreign investment would have had on
the U.S. economy during the late 1980s.
The next three essays, by Robert E. Lipsey, Dominick Salvatore, and
Martin J. Bailey and George S. Tavlas, consider, respectively, the relationship
between foreign investment in the United States, on one hand, and the na-
tion's foreign trade, its commercial policy-the extent to which tariffs and
quantitative restraints are used to limit imports-and the exchange rate of
the dollar, on the other.
Michael Ulan analyzes the economic arguments offered by opponents
and supporters of administrative restrictions on foreign investment, and
Edward M. Graham discusses the real and imagined dangers of increased
foreign investment in the United States.
Leroy O. Laney reviews the rules and laws governing foreign investment
in the United States and their economic effects. Vito Tanzi and Isaias Coelho
compare the legal restrictions on foreign investment in the United States with
those imposed in other nations. Finally, Rachel McCulloch analyzes invest-
ment in the United States as it is viewed by foreigners.
E. Dwight Phaup of Union College was to contribute to this volume an
article concerning the relationship between the net flow of foreign investment
to the United States and the role of the dollar in the international monetary
system. Professor Phaup passed away in September 1990, before finishing
his article; those who knew Dwight miss a colleague and a friend.
MICHAEL ULAN

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