Vietnam’s sustained poverty reduction has coincided with rising foreign direct investment (FDI) and a major shift from income-based to multidimensional poverty measurement, raising challenges for interpreting poverty dynamics and the role of FDI across regimes. This study examines the relationship between FDI and poverty reduction in Vietnam by accounting for poverty persistence, regional heterogeneity, and changes in poverty measurement. Using provincial panel data for 2002–2022 and a System GMM framework, three main findings emerge. First, poverty dynamics differ across measurement regimes: during the income-poverty period (2002–2016), poverty dynamics exhibited lower persistence and faster convergence, whereas under the multidimensional framework (2016–2022), poverty became more persistent and convergence slowed, reflecting the increasingly structural nature of remaining deprivation. Second, FDI is negatively associated with poverty under both measures, but its effects are conditional and uneven. Interaction effects indicate that the poverty-reducing impact of FDI depends on provincial income levels and initial deprivation, with weaker effects in provinces facing deeper multidimensional poverty. Third, higher FDI exposure is associated with greater poverty persistence, reflecting the spatial concentration of FDI in better-off regions rather than a poverty-increasing effect. The analysis is subject to limitations related to measurement regimes, and results are interpreted as conditional associations. Policy implications highlight that the poverty-reducing effects of FDI depend critically on investment quality, the strength of local production linkages, and complementary public spending, particularly in provinces facing persistent deprivation.
Phuc Tran Nguyen (Sun,) studied this question.