Global foreign direct investment (FDI) rose by 4 percent in 2024 to reach US$1.5 trillion, according to the World Investment Report 2025 released by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) on Thursday. However, the headline increase masks a more complex picture of volatile capital flows and regional disparities. While overall global FDI registered modest growth, the underlying trends reveal persistent instability. The report notes that much of the 2024 increase was driven by transient financial flows through European investment hubs, which often act as conduits rather than final destinations.

UNCTAD reported an 11 percent decline in the value of real FDI, signaling a second consecutive year of contraction in productive investment worldwide. UNCTAD Secretary-General Rebeca Grynspan warned that geopolitical tensions, trade fragmentation, and competition in industrial policy are distorting global investment patterns. She emphasized that these dynamics are eroding long-term investor confidence and redrawing global investment maps. Developed economies saw a sharp 22 percent drop in FDI, with Europe experiencing a staggering 58 percent decline.
In contrast, North America recorded a 23 percent increase, driven largely by inflows into the United States. Developing countries, meanwhile, maintained relatively stable FDI levels, although trends varied widely across regions. Africa emerged as a notable outlier, posting a 75 percent surge in FDI, largely due to a single megaproject in Egypt. Even without this exceptional case, the continent still achieved a 12 percent increase, buoyed by regulatory reforms and targeted investment facilitation efforts.
Asia retained its status as the leading recipient of global FDI. Although overall inflows fell slightly by 3 percent, Southeast Asia attracted US$225 billion in FDI a 10 percent rise and the second-highest level on record for the region. In Latin America and the Caribbean, FDI inflows declined by 12 percent, although investor sentiment remained positive in key markets such as Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico, which saw an increase in project announcements. The Middle East sustained strong investment levels, underpinned by ongoing economic diversification initiatives in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries.
Among structurally vulnerable economies, trends were mixed. FDI rose by 9 percent in least developed countries (LDCs) and by 14 percent in small island developing states (SIDS), while landlocked developing countries (LLDCs) recorded a 10 percent decline. In each group, investment remained concentrated in a few economies. UNCTAD emphasized the importance of rethinking global investment frameworks to support inclusive and sustainable growth, particularly ahead of the upcoming Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development. – By MENA Newswire News Desk.