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Investment climate, outward orientation and manufacturing firm productivity: new empirical evidence
Drawing on the World Bank Enterprise Surveys, we revisit the link between firm-level investment climate and productive performance for a panel of enterprises surveyed twice in time in 70 developing countries and 11 manufacturing industries. We take advantage of the time dimension available for an in...
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Published in: | Applied economics 2018-11, Vol.50 (53), p.5766-5794 |
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container_title | Applied economics |
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creator | Véganzonès-Varoudakis, M.A. Nguyen, H. T. M. |
description | Drawing on the World Bank Enterprise Surveys, we revisit the link between firm-level investment climate and productive performance for a panel of enterprises surveyed twice in time in 70 developing countries and 11 manufacturing industries. We take advantage of the time dimension available for an increasing number of countries to tackle the endogeneity issue stressed in previous studies. We also use pertinent econometric techniques to address other biases inherent in the data (e.g.measurement errors, missing observations and multicollinearity). Our results reinforce previous findings by validating, with a larger than usual sample of countries and industries, the importance of a larger set of environment variables. We show that infrastructure quality, information & communication technologies, skills and experience of the labour force, cost of and access to financing, security and political stability, competition and government relation contribute to firms' and countries' performances gap. The empirical analysis also illustrates that firms which choose an outward orientation have higher productivity level. Nevertheless, outward oriented enterprises are more sensitive to investment climate limitations. These findings have important policy implications by showing which dimensions of the business environment, in which industry, could help manufacturing firms to be more competitive in the present context of increasing globalization. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1080/00036846.2018.1488065 |
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T. M.</creatorcontrib><title>Investment climate, outward orientation and manufacturing firm productivity: new empirical evidence</title><title>Applied economics</title><description>Drawing on the World Bank Enterprise Surveys, we revisit the link between firm-level investment climate and productive performance for a panel of enterprises surveyed twice in time in 70 developing countries and 11 manufacturing industries. We take advantage of the time dimension available for an increasing number of countries to tackle the endogeneity issue stressed in previous studies. We also use pertinent econometric techniques to address other biases inherent in the data (e.g.measurement errors, missing observations and multicollinearity). Our results reinforce previous findings by validating, with a larger than usual sample of countries and industries, the importance of a larger set of environment variables. We show that infrastructure quality, information & communication technologies, skills and experience of the labour force, cost of and access to financing, security and political stability, competition and government relation contribute to firms' and countries' performances gap. The empirical analysis also illustrates that firms which choose an outward orientation have higher productivity level. Nevertheless, outward oriented enterprises are more sensitive to investment climate limitations. 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source | EconLit s plnými texty; EBSCOhost Business Source Ultimate; International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Taylor and Francis Social Sciences and Humanities Collection |
subjects | Bias Communications technology Companies Developing countries Economic analysis Economic models Economic theory Economics and Finance firm-level data Globalization Humanities and Social Sciences Infrastructure Investment Investment climate Investments Labor force LDCs Manufacturing Measurement outward orientation Productivity total factor productivity |
title | Investment climate, outward orientation and manufacturing firm productivity: new empirical evidence |
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