Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central Asia

This study investigates the firm- and country-specific factors that affect SMEs’ access to finance and the relationship between financial constraint and firm growth in emerging economies of Central Asia. To address the research questions, a two-stage empirical analysis including ordered probit, p...

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Main Authors: Mirgul NIZAEVA, Ali COSKUN
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ala-Too International University 2021-05-01
Series:Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ejbe.org/EJBE2021Vol14No27p001-NIZAEVA-COSKUN.pdf
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spelling doaj-faaa9329ce214cedaf86443a1ee619c52021-07-02T10:22:30ZengAla-Too International UniversityEurasian Journal of Business and Economics 1694-59481694-59482021-05-01142712810.17015/ejbe.2021.027.01Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central AsiaMirgul NIZAEVA0Ali COSKUN1Regional Institute of Central AsiaAmerican Universityof the Middle EastThis study investigates the firm- and country-specific factors that affect SMEs’ access to finance and the relationship between financial constraint and firm growth in emerging economies of Central Asia. To address the research questions, a two-stage empirical analysis including ordered probit, probit, and feasible generalized least squares (FGLS) specifications were conducted. Firm-level data used in the analysis is obtained from the fifth round of the Business Environment and Enterprise Survey (BEEPS V) and country-level data acquired from national and international datasets. The study's findings implied that in the Central Asian economies, country-specific factors are more likely to affect access to external finance of SMEs than firm-specific determinants. Among firm-specific factors, only foreign ownership is significantly related to financing constraint perception of SMEs; where, the interest rate is positively, and domestic credit market, inflation, and log of GDP per capita are negatively related to financing constraint level. In Central Asia, an insignificant relationship between growth and financing constraints was found. The determinants of financing constraints and access to finance–growth relations, which address the issue of great significance for SME growth in the selected countries, were interpreted with region-specific factors.https://ejbe.org/EJBE2021Vol14No27p001-NIZAEVA-COSKUN.pdfaccess to financebeeps vcentral asiagrowthsmall and medium-sized enterprises
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mirgul NIZAEVA
Ali COSKUN
spellingShingle Mirgul NIZAEVA
Ali COSKUN
Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central Asia
Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics
access to finance
beeps v
central asia
growth
small and medium-sized enterprises
author_facet Mirgul NIZAEVA
Ali COSKUN
author_sort Mirgul NIZAEVA
title Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central Asia
title_short Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central Asia
title_full Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central Asia
title_fullStr Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central Asia
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of the Financial Constraint and Its Effects on the SME Growth in Central Asia
title_sort determinants of the financial constraint and its effects on the sme growth in central asia
publisher Ala-Too International University
series Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics
issn 1694-5948
1694-5948
publishDate 2021-05-01
description This study investigates the firm- and country-specific factors that affect SMEs’ access to finance and the relationship between financial constraint and firm growth in emerging economies of Central Asia. To address the research questions, a two-stage empirical analysis including ordered probit, probit, and feasible generalized least squares (FGLS) specifications were conducted. Firm-level data used in the analysis is obtained from the fifth round of the Business Environment and Enterprise Survey (BEEPS V) and country-level data acquired from national and international datasets. The study's findings implied that in the Central Asian economies, country-specific factors are more likely to affect access to external finance of SMEs than firm-specific determinants. Among firm-specific factors, only foreign ownership is significantly related to financing constraint perception of SMEs; where, the interest rate is positively, and domestic credit market, inflation, and log of GDP per capita are negatively related to financing constraint level. In Central Asia, an insignificant relationship between growth and financing constraints was found. The determinants of financing constraints and access to finance–growth relations, which address the issue of great significance for SME growth in the selected countries, were interpreted with region-specific factors.
topic access to finance
beeps v
central asia
growth
small and medium-sized enterprises
url https://ejbe.org/EJBE2021Vol14No27p001-NIZAEVA-COSKUN.pdf
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