Published January 3, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Investments, Credit, and Corporate Financial Distress: Evidence from Central and Eastern Europe

  • 1. Tallinn University of Technology

Description

Although they are instrumental for economic development, productivity-enhancing corporate investments may increase the financial vulnerability of companies, especially in an economic and financial crisis. We employ an instrumental probit model with the aim of finding evidence for the investment and credit patterns that led companies into financial distress during the global financial crisis 2009–2010. The company-level micro-data for our study on three Central and East European countries—Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania and two Baltic countries, Latvia and Lithuania—originates from two independent surveys, the Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Survey conducted in 2008 and the Financial Crisis Survey conducted in 2009/2010. Both were carried out jointly by the EBRD and the World Bank. Our results emphasize a substantial adverse impact from investment intensity and debt financing on company financial soundness during a crisis. On top of that, we discover a strong non-linear pattern in the sensitivity of company distress to its investment-financing nexus.

Notes

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Emerging Markets Finance and Trade on 03 Jan 2018, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/1540496X.2017.1300092

Files

Männasoo_Maripuu_Hazak_EMFT_AM_Investments Credit and Corporate Financial Distress Evidence from Central and Eastern Europe.pdf

Additional details

Funding

IKID – Institutions for Knowledge Intensive Development: Economic and Regulatory Aspects in South-East Asian Transition Economies 734712
European Commission