G31 - Capital Budgeting; Fixed Investment and Inventory Studies; CapacityNávrat zpět

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Corporate Budgeting Practices: Empirical Evidence from the Czech Republic

Lenka Stryckova

Prague Economic Papers 2023, 32(4):411-445 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.838

This paper investigates current budgeting practices of Czech companies. The article aims to provide recent empirical evidence on the impact of business complexity on budgeting in the Czech Republic, with the main focus on modern budgeting methods. Despite the plethora of critical voices against traditional budgeting, budgeting remains an essential part of most companies' corporate governance. The empirical investigation is based on a questionnaire survey and its statistical evaluation using tests of goodness of fit and cluster analysis. Fundamental research questions of the paper include the influence of business complexity on Czech companies' budgeting practices, factors that currently play an essential role and their importance, and the approach of Czech companies to modern budgeting practices. The results indicate that Czech firms use various financial management tools, including budgets. Traditional budgeting methods are still dominant in most companies; empirical data evaluation confirmed mild differences between companies financed by domestic and foreign capital; nevertheless, those distinctions were not confirmed by statistical testing. Essential factors in the budgeting practice of the respondents are the connection of budgets to strategic planning and the possibility of using budgets as a tool for business performance evaluation.

How Important is the Time Value of Money in Decision Making? Results of an Experiment

Victor Dragotă

Prague Economic Papers 2022, 31(3):259-275 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.805

This paper tests how important the time value of money (TVM) principle is in decision making in real-life conditions, when different selection criteria can be considered. A three-stage survey was administered to students from a Romanian university of economics. They were asked to choose between two cars. These cars have equal total cash outflows but different present values. The benefits from using them were not specified, thus inducing a model ambiguity: respondents may consider only cash flows, but they can consider other benefits, too. It was tested whether the answers remain stable when supplementary information is provided. The respondents explained their motivations. Probit regressions were used to explain the preferences for applying or not applying TVM, for switching from one answer to another, and for converging to a response compatible with a preference for TVM. TVM was not the main selection criterion. Financial education had no impact on the opinion.

Cash Flow Sensitivities of Financial Decisions: Evidence from an Emerging Market

Aysa Ipek Erdogan

Prague Economic Papers 2018, 27(5):554-572 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.675

This study investigates the sensitivity of financing, investment, and distribution decisions to changes in operating cash flow, and whether these sensitivities depend on whether or not firms are financially constrained. Using a sample of 2,650 firm-years of Turkish firms for the period 1996 to 2013, we find that an increase in the short-term cash flows is associated with an increase in cash balances, irrespective of whether or not firms are financially constrained. However, unconstrained firms hold a larger cash balance than constrained firms. Dividends are positively related to the short-term cash flows of both types of firms. Investments are not sensitive to cash flow for either type of firms. An increase in their short-term cash flow induces the financially constrained firms to reduce debt financing, but makes the unconstrained firms increase their debt financing and reduce equity financing. Although firms in general prefer to use part of the saved cash in the long term, they do not deplete their cash savings. Constrained firms resort to debt financing in response to an increase in their long-term cash flow.

Parent Influence on Loan Pricing by Czech Banks

Alexis Derviz, Marie Raková

Prague Economic Papers 2012, 21(4):434-449 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.433

We investigate the influence which the financial condition of a multinational bank group may have on the lending rates of its affiliates, using data from the ten biggest banks in the Czech Republic under foreign control. The analysis is based on a theory of bank lending in which the implicit opportunity costs of lending by a foreign bank affiliate are influenced by the scarcity of funds within the multinational conglomerate. The theory predicts that parent banks' influence should be stronger in loan segments with more pronounced information asymmetry. Our empirical model, which explains the interest rate charged by the affiliate by means of affiliate-level controls and a parent influence variable, is tested for three categories of commercial non-financial borrowers (domestically owned firms, foreign-owned firms and the self-employed). Evidence of parent influence is found in a limited number of cases of banks and borrower classes for which the constraint on fund flow within the parent bank group is likely to be tight, particularly when the borrower class is of strategic importance for the affiliate's overall performance.

A Classification of International Business Strategies in the Czech Republic: A Longitudinal Analysis of Selected Firms

James D. Goodnow, Pavel Vopařil

Prague Economic Papers 2005, 14(4):331-349 | DOI: 10.18267/j.pep.269

This study is focused on relationship between external and internal impact on decisionmaking influencing international business strategies in transitional economy. Drawing from secondary and primary interview data on international business activities of 18 startups and 20 enterprises operating in the Czech Republic (including firms controlled by both domestic and foreign investors), respectively, the authors propose five strategies. In general, the findings suggest that strategies developed by domestically owned niche-focused or recent startups and those carefully guided by inbound foreign direct investors are more successful. Moreover, the more successful ( i.e., those experiencing significant domestic and international sales growth) are those who develop unique marketing strategies. Uncontrollable externalities do not appear to have an impact on firms' success or failure. The regionally oriented exporting tends to be the dominant strategy. Globally oriented export activities are relatively modest whereas outbound direct investment strategies are very minor compared with inbound foreign direct investment activities.