"FDI inflows in 2015 alone totaled a record USD 348 billion, rebounding from 2014 (USD 172 billion), and well above 2013 inflows (USD 201 billion)," said the report issued by the Office of Chief Economist, US Department of Commerce.
The report said that in 2014, the FDI position, or the stock of foreign investment, in the United States was USD 2.9 trillion on a historical-cost basis.
Manufacturing (36 per cent) and banking, finance, and insurance (20 per cent) comprised the majority of the stock of FDI, followed by "other industries" (18 per cent), and wholesale trade (12 per cent).
In 2014, expenditures from Japan were USD 2.8 billion and those from China were USD 1.3 billion. The combined greenfield FDI from Europe was USD 4.7 billion in 2014.
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Observing that investment in the United States remains strong, total FDI stock in the United States grew an average of 6 per cent per year from 2009-2014, the report said the largest sources of FDI into the United States are advanced economies, led by the United Kingdom, Japan, and Germany.
According to the report, majority-owned US affiliates of foreign entities employed 6.1 million US workers in 2013, up from 5.8 million in 2011. These firms generally provide compensation at higher levels than the US average, at nearly USD 80,000 per US employee in 2013, as compared to average earnings of USD 60,000 for workers in the economy as a whole.
Newly collected data shows that "greenfield" investment expenditures by foreigners totaled USD 16.6 billion in 2014, with expenditures on establishing new businesses totaling USD 13.8 billion and expenditures on expanding existing businesses totaling USD 2.8 billion.
"In 2014, foreign investors spent USD 224.7 billion acquiring US companies; therefore, total first-year expenditures by foreign entities (acquisitions plus expansions plus establishment of new businesses) were USD 241.3 billion," the report said.