Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara Africa

Financial constraints have significant implications on firm productivity growth and cross-country income distribution. This study analyses the dynamics of firm productivity and cross-country income differences in a sample of 9 African countries using a stochastic frontier estimator on recent 2016 Wo...

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Main Authors: Sanday Amos, Doungahire Abdoul Karim Zanhouo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-12-01
Series:Borsa Istanbul Review
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214845019302601
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spelling doaj-eea1b70034c44270be16d775295502c62020-11-25T01:53:19ZengElsevierBorsa Istanbul Review2214-84502019-12-01194357371Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara AfricaSanday Amos0Doungahire Abdoul Karim Zanhouo1Corresponding author.; Department of Economics, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Anadolu University, Yunus Emre Campus, Eskisehir, 26470, TurkeyDepartment of Economics, Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Anadolu University, Yunus Emre Campus, Eskisehir, 26470, TurkeyFinancial constraints have significant implications on firm productivity growth and cross-country income distribution. This study analyses the dynamics of firm productivity and cross-country income differences in a sample of 9 African countries using a stochastic frontier estimator on recent 2016 World Bank Enterprise Survey data. After controlling for firm heterogeneity, we find large dispersions in marginal revenue products of capital and labour and efficiencies between financially constrained and unconstrained firms. Financially constrained firms have 6.6 percent lower marginal revenue product of capital relative to unconstrained firms. Moreover, constrained firms are also more inefficient and less productive relative to unconstrained firms. Constrained firms are 15 percent less efficient due to borrowing constraints compared to unconstrained firms. Keywords: Financial constraints, Firm productivity, Misallocation, JEL classification: D24, D25, D33, L25, O47http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214845019302601
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sanday Amos
Doungahire Abdoul Karim Zanhouo
spellingShingle Sanday Amos
Doungahire Abdoul Karim Zanhouo
Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara Africa
Borsa Istanbul Review
author_facet Sanday Amos
Doungahire Abdoul Karim Zanhouo
author_sort Sanday Amos
title Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara Africa
title_short Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara Africa
title_full Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara Africa
title_fullStr Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara Africa
title_full_unstemmed Financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: Evidence from sub-Sahara Africa
title_sort financial constraints, firm productivity and cross-country income differences: evidence from sub-sahara africa
publisher Elsevier
series Borsa Istanbul Review
issn 2214-8450
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Financial constraints have significant implications on firm productivity growth and cross-country income distribution. This study analyses the dynamics of firm productivity and cross-country income differences in a sample of 9 African countries using a stochastic frontier estimator on recent 2016 World Bank Enterprise Survey data. After controlling for firm heterogeneity, we find large dispersions in marginal revenue products of capital and labour and efficiencies between financially constrained and unconstrained firms. Financially constrained firms have 6.6 percent lower marginal revenue product of capital relative to unconstrained firms. Moreover, constrained firms are also more inefficient and less productive relative to unconstrained firms. Constrained firms are 15 percent less efficient due to borrowing constraints compared to unconstrained firms. Keywords: Financial constraints, Firm productivity, Misallocation, JEL classification: D24, D25, D33, L25, O47
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214845019302601
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