Comparative Study of Multinational Companies in the Enlarged EU - A Technology Transfer Perspective
Johannes Stephan, Björn Jindra, I. Klugert
Conference Proceedings of „Comparing International Competitiveness of Manufacturing Companies in the EU with Special Emphasis on Central and Eastern Europe“,
2007
Abstract
Our study makes a novel contribution to the analysis of the link between multinational companies' heterogeneity and technological transfer. Thereby, we focus on internal technology transfer i.e. technology flowing from the multinational enterprise to the foreign subsidiary. We estimate the impact of corporate governance, subsidiary objectives, local absorptive capacity, as well as the cultural and geographic distance as potential determinants of internal technology transfer. We control for other observed firm- and industry-specific effects as well as unobserved host-country effects. We test our hypothesis with a firm-level data simultaneously collected from 434 foreign subsidiaries in Poland, Hungary, Estonia, Slovakia and Slovenia in 2002/2003. The evidence seems to indicate that the nature of the parent-subsidiary relationship is subject to the institutional context, subsidiary objectives, and risks involved for the foreign parent. These factors in turn determine the incentives for transferring knowledge to the subsidiary. Foreign subsidiaries' absorptive capacity enhances the intensity of internal technology transfer. In contrast geographic distance seems to limit the extent of technology transfer within the company. Country-of-origin-effects seem not to be statistically relevant for internal technology transfer once we control for observable firm, industry, and unobserved host-country-specific effects.
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Das Programm „Stadtumbau Ost“ und seine wirtschaftlichen Effekte für die beteiligten Städte
Claus Michelsen, Martin T. W. Rosenfeld
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 6,
2007
Abstract
Political measures in the field of urban development have relevant impacts on the local and regional economy, for example on private investment, the value of real estate or the image of a city. An evaluation of national (federal) programs for the support of urban development would not be complete without considering these impacts. For the measures, which are supported by the federal program for support on “Urban Redevelopment in East Germany” (“Stadtumbau Ost”), the economic conditions of the supported cities have played, so far, only a minor role. One expression for this is that the measures for demolishing (“Rückbau”) were concentrated on quarters with prefabricated buildings. From the perspective of local and regional economic development, there have also been failures in the allocation of money for increasing the value of real estate (“Aufwertung”), as the article shows for the example of the state of Saxony.
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Systematic Mispricing in European Equity Prices?
Marian Berneburg
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 6,
2007
Abstract
One empirical argument that has been around for some time and that clearly contra- dicts equity market efficiency is that market prices seem too volatile to be optimal estimates of the present value of future discounted cash flows. Based on this, it is deduced that systematic pricing errors occur in equity markets which hence can not be efficient in the Effcient Market Hypothesis sense. The paper tries to show that this so-called excess volatility is to a large extend the result of the underlying assumptions, which are being employed to estimate the present value of cash flows. Using monthly data for three investment style indices from an integrated European Equity market, all usual assumptions are dropped. This is achieved by employing the Gordon Growth Model and using an estimation process for the dividend growth rate that was suggested by Barsky and De Long. In extension to Barsky and De Long, the discount rate is not assumed at some arbitrary level, but it is estimated from the data. In this manner, the empirical results do not rely on the prerequisites of sta- tionary dividends, constant dividend growth rates as well as non-variable discount rates. It is shown that indeed volatility declines considerably, but is not eliminated. Furthermore, it can be seen that the resulting discount factors for the three in- vestment style indices can not be considered equal, which, on a risk-adjusted basis, indicates performance differences in the investment strategies and hence stands in contradiction to an efficient market. Finally, the estimated discount rates under- went a plausibility check, by comparing their general movement to a market based interest rate. Besides the most recent data, the estimated discount rates match the movements of market interest rates fairly well.
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Bank Lending, Bank Capital Regulation and Efficiency of Corporate Foreign Investment
Diemo Dietrich, Achim Hauck
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 4,
2007
Abstract
In this paper we study interdependencies between corporate foreign investment and the capital structure of banks. By committing to invest predominantly at home, firms can reduce the credit default risk of their lending banks. Therefore, banks can refinance loans to a larger extent through deposits thereby reducing firms’ effective financing costs. Firms thus have an incentive to allocate resources inefficiently as they then save on financing costs. We argue that imposing minimum capital adequacy for banks can eliminate this incentive by putting a lower bound on financing costs. However, the Basel II framework is shown to miss this potential.
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FDI versus exports: Evidence from German banks
Claudia M. Buch, A. Lipponer
Journal of Banking and Finance,
No. 3,
2007
Abstract
We use a new bank-level dataset to study the FDI-versus-exports decision for German banks. We extend the literature on multinational firms in two directions. First, we simultaneously study FDI and the export of cross-border financial services. Second, we test recent theories on multinational firms which show the importance of firm heterogeneity [Helpman, E., Melitz, M.J., Yeaple, S.R., 2004. Export versus FDI. American Economic Review 94 (1), 300–316]. Our results show that FDI and cross-border services are complements rather than substitutes. Heterogeneity of banks has a significant impact on the internationalization decision. More profitable and larger banks are more likely to expand internationally than smaller banks. They have more extensive foreign activities, and they are more likely to engage in FDI in addition to cross-border financial services.
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Schwierigkeiten der Investitionsförderung – Der Fall CargoLifter AG
Mirko Titze
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 12,
2006
Abstract
This paper shows how the state of Brandenburg has subsidized large investments. The Focus of this papers is the case of the CargoLifter AG. The government intended to prevent in the mid 90's the total break-down of the economy in the state of Brandenburg, which is particularly affected by structural changes. This kind of policy is highly controversial casing lengthy discussions. After raising approximately 220 millions of Euro in the capital market and receiving nearly 50 million Euros from the state of Brandenburg the CargoLifter AG run into financial difficulties. The Government subsidized the CargoLifter AG as part of the “Gemeinschaftsaufgabe zur Verbesserung der regionalen Wirtschaftsstruktur - (GA)“. There were arguments to subsidize the CargoLifter AG. This paper analyzes the project management of the company as well as the subsidization with the “Gemeinschaftsaufgabe zur Verbesserung der regionalen Wirtschaftsstruktur - (GA)“of the state of Brandenburg in terms of their contribution to the insolvency of the CargoLifter AG.
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Where enterprises lead, people follow? Links between migration and FDI in Germany
Claudia M. Buch, J. Kleinert, Farid Toubal
European Economic Review,
No. 8,
2006
Abstract
Standard neoclassical models of economic integration are based on the assumptions that capital and labor are substitutes and that the geography of factor market integration does not matter. Yet, these two assumptions are violated if agglomeration forces among factors from specific source countries are at work. Agglomeration implies that factors behave as complements and that the country of origin matters. This paper analyzes agglomeration between capital and labor empirically. We use state-level German data to answer the question whether and how migration and foreign direct investment (FDI) are linked. Stocks of inward FDI and of immigrants have similar determinants, and the geography of factor market integration matters. There are higher stocks of inward FDI in German states hosting a large foreign population from the same country of origin. This agglomeration effect is confined to higher-income source countries.
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Revision des neoklassischen Wachstumsmodells - Sind alle Lehrbücher falsch?
Wolfgang Cezanne, Mirko Titze, Lars Weber
WiSt - Wirtschaftswissenschaftliches Studium,
No. 9,
2006
Abstract
Das neoklassische Wachstumsmodell von Solow aus dem Jahr 1956 gehört heute immer noch zu den wichtigsten Wachstumstheorien. Die heute gelehrten Formen, die sich in nahezu allen volkswirtschaftlichen Lehrbüchern befinden, verletzen jedoch einen wichtigen Zusammenhang aus der volkswirtschaftlichen Gesamtrechnung: die Identität von Nettoinvestitionen und Ersparnis. Die Lösungen der Lehrbuchmodelle widersprechen damit der ursprünglichen Solow-Lösung. Der vorliegende Beitrag zeigt die Konsequenzen dieser Ungenauigkeiten auf. Darüber hinaus wird ein Modell präsentiert, das die Identität von Nettoinvestitionen und Ersparnis wahrt und folglich mit der Solow-Lösung vereinbar ist.
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Die Gestaltung der Wirtschaftsstruktur durch das Land Brandenburg - Eine kritische Analyse der Subventionszahlungen für die CargoLifter AG
Mirko Titze
Forum der Forschung. Wissenschaftsmagazin der Brandenburgischen Technischen Universität Cottbus,
No. 17,
2004
Abstract
The Government of the State of Brandenburg subsidised the company CargoLifter AG on the basis of the „new industrial policy“. Following this policy the government supports individually selected industries or companies. The „new industrial policy“ is supported by the strategic trade policy, which states that subsidising domestic companies in incomplete markets with declining average costs and high entry barriers can increase the welfare level of a particular region. The following article provides an analysis whether in the case of Cargo-Lifter the Government of the State of Brandenburg pursued an effective strategic trade policy. Moreover the article investigates particular problems of the strategic trade policy.
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Under which conditions do inland suppliers profit from foreign direct investment?
Björn Jindra, Johannes Stephan
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 10,
2006
Abstract
Aus theoretischer Sicht ergeben sich durch die Präsenz ausländischer Unternehmen nicht nur realwirtschaftliche Effekte auf Produktion und Beschäftigung, sondern auch ein Potential für technologische Entwicklung durch Wissenstransfer zu einheimischen Unternehmen. Dieser Wissenstransfer ist abhängig von dem Grad der Verflechtung des ausländischen Unternehmens mit der einheimischen Wirtschaft. Dabei kommt der Beziehung zwischen Investor und einheimischen Zulieferunternehmen eine zentrale Bedeutung zu, denn multinationale Unternehmen haben ein strategisches Interesse, alle lokalen Effizienzvorteile auszuschöpfen. Der vorliegende Beitrag unterstellt, daß sowohl die Ausbildung von Zulieferbeziehungen als auch das Potential für Wissenstransfer zum einen von organisatorischen Faktoren im ausländischen Unternehmen und zum anderen von der lokalen Wissensbasis und der technologischen Leistungsfähigkeit abhängig sind. Dieser Zusammenhang wird an Hand eines Datensatzes von 434 Tochterunternehmen aus fünf Mittel- und Osteuropäischen Ländern getestet. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, daß die Intensität von Zulieferbeziehungen als auch das Potential für Wissenstransfer steigt, wenn Tochterunternehmen als Joint Venture geführt werden sowie Eigenverantwortung in den Bereichen Logistik und Zulieferung besitzen. Die technologische Leistungsfähigkeit des heimischen Sektors fördert sowohl die Intensität von Zulieferbeziehungen als auch das Potential für Wissenstransfer. Zusätzlich steigert die absorptive Kapazität der einheimischen Zulieferbetriebe das Potential für Wissenstransfer. Will man verhindern, daß ausländische Investitionen auf einer „Insel“ inmitten der einheimischen Wirtschaft operieren und keine Wissenseffekte generieren, dann bietet die Förderung von Forschungs- und Entwicklungskooperationen zwischen ausländischen Investoren und lokalen Zulieferbetrieben in technologisch leistungsfähigen Sektoren ein opportunes Mittel.
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