Zahra KHALILZADEH SILABI

KHALILZADEH SILABI
Zahra

doctorants-allocataires

Domaine de recherche : Économie Internationale et Développement Durable

Bureau : A211

E-mail : ay.khalilzadeh@gmail.com

Divers

Sujet de thèse : « The effect of language and immigrants behavior on human development and environment in destination country »

Encadré par Isabelle RABAUD

Travaux

  • Publications dans des revues scientifiques
  • Ouvrages et rapports
  • Documents de travail et autres publications
  • Communications

Aucune publication disponible pour le moment.

Aucune publication disponible pour le moment.

2026

Public Health as a Buffer for FDI: The Role of Healthcare Services in Economic Stability

Zahra Khalilzadeh Silabi


This study examines how epidemic outbreaks influence foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows in developing countries, with a particular focus on whether healthcare systems can act as buffers during such shocks. Using a panel dataset of 98 countries from 2000 to 2022, the analysis combines two-way fixed effects (FE) models and the Local Projection Method (LPM). The analysis is structured in three parts: First, fixed-effects regressions assess the average effect of 20 major epidemics on FDI, revealing that diseases such as Ebola, MERS, Lassa Fever, and Leptospirosis significantly reduce investment inflows. Second, local projection methods trace the short-and medium-term responses of FDI to health shocks by transmission type. The results show varying recovery patterns: while FDI tends to rebound after direct contact or mosquito-borne outbreaks, airborne diseases cause more persistent declines. Third, the study explores whether stronger healthcare systems can mitigate these negative effects. Results suggest that countries with a higher density of nurses experience less severe FDI losses during outbreaks, particularly for diseases transmitted through direct contact or bodily fluids. These findings underline the importance of healthcare investment not only for public health but also for economic resilience. By distinguishing effects across disease types and highlighting the moderating role of health infrastructure, this study offers practical insights for policymakers seeking to safeguard investment flows during times of crisis.
Lien HAL

2025

Ebola's Shadow on African Economies: FDI and Remittances

Zahra Khalilzadeh Silabi, Isabelle Rabaud


This paper investigates the impact of the Ebola epidemic on foreign direct investment (FDI) and remittance inflows across 28 African countries between 2000 and 2019. While existing literature highlights the economic costs of epidemics within affected countries, limited attention has been given to the broader financial repercussions-particularly on external financial flows and regional spillovers. This study addresses this gap by examining the dynamic responses of FDI and remittances to Ebola outbreaks using a local projection method (LPM) and validating the findings through system Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) to address endogeneity concerns. We construct a unique Ebola shock variable that captures both direct and indirect exposure, allowing for comparative analysis across affected countries, neighboring countries, and the broader region. The results reveal a sharp and persistent decline in FDI following Ebola outbreaks, especially in directly affected countries, driven by heightened uncertainty and investor risk aversion. In contrast, remittance inflows exhibit a counter-cyclical pattern, rising significantly in affected countries as diaspora communities respond to increased financial needs. Spillover effects are also evident: neighboring countries experience FDI losses but weaker remittance responses.

Lien HAL

Aucune publication disponible pour le moment.