F23 - Multinational Firms; International BusinessReturn
Results 1 to 23 of 23:
The Impact of Infrastructure Development on the Economic Growth of the Countries in the Western Balkans and their EU FutureDanijela Jaćimović, Milena Lipovina-Božović, Bojan Pejović, Sunčica VukovićPrague Economic Papers 2025, 34(1):45-77 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.884 The infrastructure investment could strongly influence the economic growth in the Western Balkans countries and contribute to improved regional cooperation and reconciliation and to faster integration into the EU. However, it is essential that public investments in infrastructure are properly financed and managed. To measure the impact of infrastructure indicators on economic growth, panel regression analysis was used for the period 2000-2021, in six Western Balkan countries. The paper addresses the important question of how to intensify investments in infrastructure to achieve sustainable growth in the Western Balkans. The obtained results confirm the earlier findings about the significant impact of energy, ITC, and road infrastructure on economic growth in the Western Balkans. |
Exploration of the Size Effect on Transaction Data of Non-publicly Traded EU CompaniesTomáš Podškubka, Štěpán Kohoutek, Jana SkálováPrague Economic Papers 2024, 33(4):414-443 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.870 This paper examines the effect of company size on transaction multiples. The existence of the size effect has been investigated by a number of authors who have primarily used data for publicly traded companies for their research. Our research works with data from private transactions with non-traded companies (shares) from the EU. The transaction price concluded in these deals is decomposed into the product of profit and transaction multiple as when using market comparison valuation methods. Transaction multiples are relative types of financial metrics that typically compare various levels of profit such as EBITDA, EBIT or EAT to a value that an investor is willing to pay to acquire a given company. The objective of this paper is to confirm the hypothesis that larger companies are purchased for higher profit multiples than smaller companies. Accordingly, in the context of DCF valuation methods, higher profit multiples correspond to a lower discount rate and vice versa. However, it should be noted that despite the large amount of research conducted, the existence of the size effect is still not confirmed or refuted at present. |
ATP Identification Using Balance of Payments Data: Case of the Czech RepublicJan Pavel, Jana TepperováPrague Economic Papers 2021, 30(1):3-19 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.757 Multinational enterprises apply aggressive tax planning (ATP) to optimize global tax liability usually by combining parameters of different tax systems in both national jurisdictions and double tax treaties. At a macroeconomic level, the implementation of various optimization schemes affects the given values of the balance of payments. By conducting econometric analysis, the present paper examines the extent to which selected optimization schemes can be traced in the Czech Republic's balance of payments. The results show that payments for counselling services and royalties flow mostly to locations with low corporate tax rates, which may suggest an attempt to shift the tax base. Moreover, dividend and interest yields tend to move to countries with high foreign direct investments (FDIs) and balanced ratios between FDIs received and made, indicating that they are only conduit (transit) countries through which profits are transferred to another destination. |
The Influence of FDI on Domestic Innovation: An Investigation Using Structural BreaksMingbo Zheng, Gen-Fu Feng, Jun Wen, Chun-Ping ChangPrague Economic Papers 2020, 29(4):403-423 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.739 This paper investigates the influence of foreign direct investment on innovation by em-ploying the panel cointegration method incorporating multiple structural breaks and a dynamic common correlated estimation for 34 countries over the period 1991-2016. Our findings indicate that the series of innovation and foreign direct investment are stationary after considering the potential structural breaks and that the external shock is mainly from country-specific shocks. Our results also suggest that a long-run co-integrated relationship exists with one break between foreign direct investment and innovation. Furthermore, the estimation based on the dynamic common correlated estimation shows that foreign direct investment has a long-run significant positive influence on technological innovation. Our findings shed light on the importance of accounting for structural breaks when discussing the relationship between foreign direct investment and technological innovation. |
Do SMEs Face a Higher Tax Burden? Evidence from Belgian Tax Return DataPieter Buyl, Annelies RoggemanPrague Economic Papers 2019, 28(6):729-747 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.719 The public debate on taxation of domestic small and medium enterprises (SMEs) versus large and multinational enterprises (MNEs) is highly relevant nowadays. Using confidential tax return data instead of financial statement data, the results indicate that domestic SMEs face on average a 1.6 and 4.8 percentage-point higher effective tax burden compared to large domestic and large MNEs respectively. This suggests that tax incentives for SMEs are inadequate to compensate for the tax advantages of large and internationally operating companies. Furthermore, we show that the use of information built exclusively upon accounting data could bias the results. |
Institutions as a Mediator of the Effect of Crossborder Mergers & Acquisitions on Domestic InvestmentJelena Zvezdanović Lobanova, Davorin Kračun, Alenka KavklerPrague Economic Papers 2018, 27(4):479-493 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.665 In this article we analyse the impact of the interaction between cross-border mergers and acquisitions and the quality of the institutional setting on domestic investment using panel data for 22 European transition countries from 2000 to 2014. We investigate whether the progress and durability of institutional reforms have a crucial influence on the economic performance of cross-border mergers and acquisitions in transition countries. Our empirical findings indicate that contemporaneous cross-border mergers and acquisitions have a crowding-out effect on domestic investment in the year of merger or acquisition, but the influence of their lagged level has a strong crowding-in effect one year later. We find that the overall quality of the institutional setting and the rule of law negatively and significantly affect the relation between this type of foreign direct investment and domestic investment, both in the short and long run. Political stability exhibits a positive and significant impact on domestic investment in the current period and over time. |
The CCCTB Allocation Formula Game: The Performance of Economics SectorsKateřina Krchnivá, Danuše NerudováPrague Economic Papers 2018, 27(4):427-448 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.660 The implementation of the Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (hereinafter CCCTB) in the European Union will probably have an impact on tax revenues of the concerned states since the distribution of the group tax base shall reflect the capacity to earn income by individual group members. This is secured by the employing of the allocation formula containing three factors that shall reflect the profit generating process of individual companies. The paper analyses the explanatory power of the proposed CCCTB formula on the data sample of group companies with a link to the Czech Republic - either parent or subsidiary company in the group covered in dataset is tax resident of the Czech Republic. The obtained results are evaluated on the level of individual economic sector with the aim to verify if the proposed CCCTB formula is the most suitable for them, where the sufficiency of the explanatory power of the allocation formula was indicated based on the assigned change of distributed profit to the respective economic sector. |
The Determinants of Inward FDI in Selected ServiceS Industries in MalaysiATham Siew Yean, Andrew Jia-Yi Kam, Nirwan bin NohPrague Economic Papers 2018, 27(2):215-231 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.652 In its drive to achieve a high-income country status, Malaysia aspires to attract more private investment into the services sector. However, empirical studies on the determinants of foreign direct investment (FDI), especially in the services sector, are sparse, even more so at the industry level. The location theory asserts that FDI inflows into a host country are determined by variables related to resources, infrastructure, market conditions, cost and business environment. This paper investigates the validity of the location theory on Malaysia using a set of panel data for eight services industries from 2003 to 2010. We find that at the industry level, market size, ICT infrastructure and human capital have significantly influenced FDI inflows into the services sector. However, the impact of FDI liberalisation is not significant compared to the dynamic changes of the other variables as progress in FDI liberalization is slow and limited. |
Multinational Resilience or Dispensable Jobs? German FDI and Employment in the Czech Republic Around the Great RecessionMichael Moritz, Bastian Stockinger, Merlind TrepeschPrague Economic Papers 2017, 26(3):345-359 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.617 This article investigates the employment development in Czech-based firms in German ownership in the years around the Great Recession of 2008/2009. The intense involvement of German firms in the economy of the neighbouring country via foreign direct investment (FDI) raises a question whether under the conditions of a historically deep global downturn, the Czech employees in multinational companies were confronted with an increased volatility of their jobs. Using a unique firm-level dataset, we contrast the affiliates of German investors with purely Czech-owned enterprises. Our findings indicate that in the years before the crisis, firms with German capital exhibited a noticeably more positive employment development. The results from the year 2008 onwards give reason to the conclusion that the German-owned firms played a stabilizing role for the Czech labour market during the recession. |
FDI to EU15 and New Member States: Comparative Analysis of Inflow DeterminantsViktorija IgošinaPrague Economic Papers 2015, 24(3):260-273 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.518 Wide range of academic studies and economic practice are showing strong correlation between GDP growth and FDI flows. Moreover, there is a number of cases when FDI inflows were positively impacting economic development. That provides grounds and needs for profound research in the area of investment determinants. The main objective of this paper is to classify FDI determinants in the EU countries. All assuming that there are differences between the two groups - old and new member states. The econometrical approach of gravity modelling was chosen as the most appropriate methodology to analyse panel data set. Panel is depicting FDI flows coming from the external nonEU investors and does not include intra EU investment flows among the member countries (firstly due to the relative insignificance of the intra-EU flows compared to the outer inflow values and secondly due to the need to answer what exactly leads non-European investor to opt for the EU country A and not B). The random effect model has proved diversity in FDI flows determinants. Study outcomes support the need for policymakers' attention in the EU investment policy harmonization, towards market equalization that would improve competiveness of the whole EU region. |
Foreign Direct Investment and the Business Cycle: New Insights after the Great RecessionCarlos Rodríguez, Ricardo BustilloPrague Economic Papers 2015, 24(2):136-153 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.505 In this paper we examine how business cycles in the home country affect outward flows of FDI (OFDI). We employ a panel data set of OFDI flows for a representative sample of countries from 1970 to 2011. The findings of the regression models that we have used are consistent with the hypothesis that OFDI flows behave pro-cyclically. This is the case for different country subsamples, for different business cycle specifications and for the inclusion of other control variables as well. Beyond this main conclusion, home country interest rate and exchange rates reveal a negative effect upon OFDI flows. |
The Weak Relation between Foreign Direct Investment and Corruption: A Theoretical and Econometric StudyTomáš Evan, Ilya BolotovPrague Economic Papers 2014, 23(4):474-492 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.494 Foreign direct investment has become an important factor of development of economies in the last decades. However, its economic nature as well as its relationship with corruption has not yet been clarified in economic literature. Following previous theoretical research, mainly Dunning's eclectic model, this paper evaluates the econometric relationship between corruption and foreign direct investment by testing three theoretically-based hypotheses: that corruption perception indicator is a stationary variable, that the relationship between corruption and foreign direct investment stock is statistically weak and that changes in foreign direct investment stock do not Granger cause changes in corruption. The verification is based on unit root tests, panel co-integration and Granger causality models performed on data from the Transparency International, the World Bank and the Heritage Foundation and the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) for 94 countries for the years 1998-2007. The results show that there is no significant relationship between the two variables. |
The Impact of Firms' Characteristics on Export Barriers' Perception: A Case of Serbian ExportersPredrag D. Radojevic, Darko Marjanovic, Tatjana RadovanovPrague Economic Papers 2014, 23(4):426-445 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.492 This papers analyses impact of firm characteristics, i.e. size, length of exporting experience, capital ownership and type of industry on export barriers' perception in case of Serbian exporters. This study is aimed at an identification of the barriers to export among examined factors of firm's internal environment, domestic business environment and foreign markets to rank barriers according to their level of impact, to spot differences in evaluation of barriers depending on firm's characteristics, and to examine correlation between firm's characteristics and barriers to export. Main hypothesis in this research was that barriers to export for Serbian exporters have been similar to those faced by exporters in other countries, and that the level of their influence depends on firm's characteristics. The empirical research has been conducted through a survey, using a questionnaire with 178 exporters taking part in it. Collected data have been analysed by descriptive statistics, differences among groups and correlation tests. The results imply that most export barriers refer to domestic business environment and that there is a correlation among firm's size, length of export experience and capital ownership with certain factors that may cause problems for exporting business. |
Changing Market Potentials, Regional Growth and Income Disparities in PolandJesús López-Rodríguez, Malgorzata Runiewicz-WardynPrague Economic Papers 2014, 23(1):63-83 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.473 In this paper we analysed to which extent the changes in market potentials in Poland have been a cause for increasing income disparities, which were observed across Polish regions from 1995 to 2008. To do so we derived and estimated a New Economy Geography Model, which relates per capita GDP growth rates to changes in market potential. The results of the crosssection estimations of the model for the period 1995-2008 and for its different subsamples point to a positive and significant effect of changing market potentials in per capita GDP growth rates. Due to the fact that core-economic regions have mostly benefited in terms of market potential growth during 1995-2008, these results confirm the important role played by the relative changing in market potentials across Polish regions in widening the gap between poor and rich regions in the country in the period of analysis. |
Mothers and Daughters: Heterogeneity of German Direct Investments in the Czech RepublicDaniel Münich, Martin Srholec, Michael Moritz, Johannes SchäfflerPrague Economic Papers 2014, 23(1):42-62 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.472 Much has been written on the distinction between vertical and horizontal foreign direct investment. However, most of the empirical literature relies on indirect and aggregated measures only. The aim of this paper is to help fill this gap by examining the differences between German affiliates in the Czech Republic and their mother companies in Germany on the basis of direct evidence on factor requirements. Using a cluster analysis on firm-level data from the unique ReLOC survey, we identify four main groups of firms that partition the sample by broad sectoral lines and by technological, educational and skill intensity of their operations within each of them. More detailed analysis of the clustering reveals that the vertical model dominates in manufacturing, while the horizontal model of investment prevails in the service sector. |
New Evidence on FDI Determinants: An Appraisal Over the Transition PeriodYulia Gorbunova, Davide Infante, Janna SmirnovaPrague Economic Papers 2012, 21(2):129-149 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.415 The aim of this work is to provide new evidence on the factors that determine the flow of FDI among transition countries. The analysis takes into consideration the period of most intense transition and post-transition (1994-2002) of 26 former socialist countries. The empirical estimates enable us to draw two main conclusions: first classical locational FDI factors maintain their role in the context of transition countries, and, second, that FDI are influenced by specific market and institutional factors. Among market variables, relatively higher labour costs surprisingly do not constitute an obstacle for foreign investment. We find that variables reflecting market stabilising institutions play a more important role than those representing market creating institutions. Although, there is a certain tolerance of foreign investors towards weak institutional environment, we demonstrate that, to attract FDI, countries should reinforce their macroeconomic stability by focusing on market stabilising institutions. |
Who Bears the Burden of Voluntary Export Restraints?Fuhmei WangPrague Economic Papers 2011, 20(3):216-231 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.397 Conventional wisdom believes that voluntary export restraints (VERs) are beneficial for the exporting country but detrimental to the importing country. Based on the benchmark model of Obstfeld and Rogoff, this paper aims to examine this belief and evaluate the welfare effects of VERs on the world economy. Analytical results find that VERs exert expansion effects on the exporting economy temporarily. The conventional view of VERs effects holds only when there is perfect competition on the goods market or when the exporting country is bigger than the importing country. On the whole, VERs deteriorate the overall welfare of the world economy. |
The supply of foreign direct investment incentives: subsidy competition in an oligopolistic frameworkTomáš HavránekPrague Economic Papers 2009, 18(2):131-155 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.346 This paper examines the microeconomic motivation of governments to provide tax incentives for foreign direct investment. Author applies the classical models of oligopoly to subsidy competition, endogenousing investment incentives, but leaving tax rates exogenous. According to the conventional wisdom, subsidy competition leads to overprovision of incentives. This paper suggests that, in the oligopolistic framework, supranational coordination can either decrease or increase the supply of subsidies. Further, in the setting of subsidy regulation, the host country's corporate income tax rate has an ambiguous effect on the provision of incentives. |
Determinants of foreign direct investment flows to developing countries: a cross-sectional analysisErdal Demirhan, Mahmut MascaPrague Economic Papers 2008, 17(4):356-369 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.337 The aim of this paper is to explore, by estimating a cross-sectional econometric model, the determining factors of foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows in developing countries over the period of 2000-2004. The study is based on a sample of cross-sectional data on 38 developing countries. We have used average value of all data for the 2000-2004 period. In the models, dependent variable is FDI. Independent variables are growth rate of per capita GDP, inflation rate, telephone main lines per 1,000 people measured in logs, labour cost per worker in manufacturing industry measured in logs, degree of openness, risk and corporate top tax rate. According to the econometric results, in the main model, growth rate of per capita, telephone main lines and degree of openness have positive sign and are statistically significant. Inflation rate and tax rate present negative sign and are statistically significant. Labour cost has positive sign and risk has negative sign. However, both are not significant. |
The endogeneity problem and fdi in transition: evidence from the privatized glass sector in the Czech RepublicElisa Galeotti, Eva RyšaváPrague Economic Papers 2008, 17(4):319-339 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.335 This paper analyses the crucial factors determining the foreign direct investment (FDI) going to the privatized glass sector in the Czech Republic. In our research we felt that there was a scant evidence in Central and Eastern Europe of the determinants of foreign direct investments (FDI) at the micro level and we were aware of the endogeneity issue of FDI. The aim of this paper is to fill these gaps. The choice of the glass sector allows for an analysis of a firm's micro characteristics that attract foreign direct investors in an industrial sector, while reducing the impact of macroeconomic factors in their choice. Our econometrical analysis, using original panel data from 1990 to 2006, gives strong evidence that foreign direct investors in the glass sector in the Czech Republic have chosen larger and more profitable firms that were intensively restructured and privatized at the beginning of the transition. Our results support the relevance of the endogeneity issue in the choice of foreign direct investors in transition countries. |
Industrial Clustering and Global Value Chains in Central and Eastern Europe: Role of Multinational Enterprises in Industrial UpgradingYusaf H. Akbar, Sonia FerencikovaPrague Economic Papers 2007, 16(3):237-251 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.307 The authors are attempting to draw together existing literature on the governance of GVCs; research on host country ""spillovers"" as a consequence of MNE activity and the broader cluster and innovation literature. While cluster research had done important work in identifying and operationalizing the necessary conditions for cluster formation, it had relatively ignored the global-local linkage brought by the presence of MNEs. The ""spillover"" literature has identified in theory numerous benefits of MNE presence in host countries. There was relatively little empirical work done in CEE to discover if these benefits actually exist. Neither literature had focused on how MNEs govern their GVCs. Thus bringing these sources together presents an important opportunity for international business. The authors find that in the Slovak case the industrial clusters among the firms surveyed were not much functional. On a strategic level, there appears to be little evidence of cooperation in areas of marketing, export promotion or investment. This is especially of concern in sectors such as automotive where cooperative strategies among suppliers could offer significant benefits. |
Foreign ownership and export propensity: the slovenian experienceMatija Rojec, Jože P. Damijan, Boris MajcenPrague Economic Papers 2002, 11(4):339-355 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.201 This paper discusses the determinants of export propensity of foreign firms in the Slovenian manufacturing sector relative to domestic firms. Using panel framework we show that superior export propensity of foreign firms is significant due to the foreign ownership and that differences in fundamental operational characteristics between domestic and foreign firms significantly affect their export propensity. |
Foreign direct investment in central europe - does it crowd in domestic investment?Jan Mišun, Vladimír TomšíkPrague Economic Papers 2002, 11(1):57-66 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.188 In this article, we tried to estimate whether foreign direct investment in the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland crowds in or crowds out domestic investment. We used a model of total investment that introduced, from the point of view of the recipient country, foreign direct investment as an exogenous variable. We found that for the time period 1990 - 2000 there was an evidence of crowding out effect in Poland. In Hungary we found a crowding in effect for the time period 1990 - 2000 as well as for the Czech Republic for the time period 1993 - 2000. |