scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
JournalISSN: 0967-0750

Economics of Transition 

Wiley-Blackwell
About: Economics of Transition is an academic journal. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Wage & Restructuring. It has an ISSN identifier of 0967-0750. Over the lifetime, 762 publications have been published receiving 29207 citations. The journal is also known as: The Economics of transition.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effects of foreign direct investment on the productivity performance of domestic firms in three emerging economies of Central and Eastern Europe: Bulgaria, Romania and Poland.
Abstract: This paper uses firm-level panel data to investigate empirically the effects of foreign direct investment on the productivity performance of domestic firms in three emerging economies of Central and Eastern Europe: Bulgaria, Romania and Poland. To this end, a unique firm-level panel dataset is used with detailed information on foreign ownership at the firm level. Two main questions are addressed in the present paper: (1) do foreign firms perform better than their domestic counterparts? (2) do foreign firms generate spillovers to domestic firms? The estimation technique in this paper takes potential endogeneity of ownership, spillovers and other factors into account by estimating a fixed effects model using instrumental variables in the general methods of moment technique for panel data. Only in Poland, do foreign firms perform better than firms without foreign participation. Moreover, for all three countries studied here, I find no evidence of positive spillovers to domestic firms, on average. In contrast, on average, there are negative spillovers to domestic firms in Bulgaria and Romania, while there are no spillovers to domestic firms in Poland. This suggests a negative competition effect that dominates a positive technology effect. JEL classification: D24, F14, O52, P31.

804 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a comprehensive analysis of legal change in the protection of shareholder and creditor rights in transition economies and its impact on the propensity of firms to raise external finance is presented, which supports the proposition that legal transplants and extensive legal reforms are not sufficient for the evolution of effective legal and market institutions.
Abstract: This paper offers the first comprehensive analysis of legal change in the protection of shareholder and creditor rights in transition economies and its impact on the propensity of firms to raise external finance. Following La Porta et al. (1998), the paper constructs an expanded set of legal indices to capture a range of potential conflicts between different stakeholders of the firm. It supplements the analysis of the law on the books with an analysis of the effectiveness of legal institutions. Our main finding is that the effectiveness of legal institutions has a much stronger impact on external finance than does the law on the books, despite legal change that has substantially improved shareholder and creditor rights. This finding supports the proposition that legal transplants and extensive legal reforms are not sufficient for the evolution of effective legal and market institutions.

525 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the determinants of European Union FDI in the CEECs at sectoral level are investigated based on a dataset created specifically for this purpose, which concentrates on the manufacturing sectors, classified according to the Pavitt taxonomy.
Abstract: This paper investigates the determinants of European Union FDI in the CEECs at sectoral level. The aim is to understand whether and to what extent FDI undertaken in different sectors reacts to the characteristics of the host countries. The analysis is based on a dataset created specifically for this purpose. It concentrates on the manufacturing sectors, classified according to the Pavitt taxonomy. Firstly, data summarizing the recent trend of FDI in the CEECs is presented and then empirical evidence given to account for differences between sectors. The estimated model is a generalization of a three-way fixed effect model incorporating ‘classic’ variables, such as labour costs as well as country-specific variables, i.e., the stage reached in the transition process. The results confirm the presence of heterogeneity at sector level.

460 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors argued that the organization structure of the economy matters and pointed out that China's hierarchical economy has been the multi-layer-multi-regional one mainly based on territorial principle.
Abstract: China's thirteen years of economic reforms (1979-1991) have achieved an average GNP annual growth rate of 8.6%. What makes China's reforms differ from those of Eastern Europe and the Soviet Union is the sustained entry and expansion of the non-state sector. We argue that the organization structure of the economy matters. Unlike their unitary hierarchical structure based on functional or specialization principles (the U-form), China's hierarchical economy has been the multi-layer-multi-regional one mainly based on territorial principle (the deep M-form, or briefly, the M-form). Reforms have further decentralized the M-form economy along regional lines, which provided flexibility and opportunities for carrying out regional experiments, for the rise of non-state enterprises, and for the emergence of markets. This is why China's non-state sector share of industrial output increased from 22% in 1978 to 47% in 1991 and its private sector's share from zero to about 10%, both being achieved without mass privatization and changes in the political system.

445 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a survey of senior managers in 117 western manufacturing companies found that host country transition progress, political stability and perceived risk influence FDI inflows as well as the predominant type of investment.
Abstract: Foreign direct investment into transition economies is reviewed in detail, both from aggregate data and from a survey of senior managers in 117 western manufacturing companies. It is found that host country transition progress, political stability and perceived risk influence FDI inflows as well as the predominant type of investment.

423 citations

Network Information
Related Journals (5)
European Economic Review
4.6K papers, 290.7K citations
86% related
Journal of Development Economics
3.4K papers, 302K citations
84% related
World Development
7.7K papers, 573.6K citations
83% related
Journal of International Economics
3.1K papers, 295.3K citations
83% related
Journal of International Money and Finance
2.8K papers, 151.3K citations
83% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
201932
201828
201726
201626
201523
201426