Firm-level characteristics and the impact of COVID-19: Examining the effects of foreign ownership and international trade

被引:6
|
作者
Jordaan, Jacob A. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utrecht, Int Campus Utrecht, Sch Econ, Utrecht, Netherlands
[2] Univ Utrecht, Int Campus Utrecht, Sch Econ, NL-3584 EC Utrecht, Netherlands
来源
WORLD ECONOMY | 2023年 / 46卷 / 07期
关键词
COVID-19; firm-level performance; international trade; multinational corporations; FINANCIAL CONSTRAINTS; SAMPLE SELECTION; CRISIS; MULTINATIONALS; LIABILITY; PRODUCTIVITY; INVESTMENT; DEPENDENCE; RESPONSES; CYCLE;
D O I
10.1111/twec.13392
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
Using a large multi-country firm-level data set from the World Bank Enterprise Survey, we examine whether multinational corporations (MNCs) differ from domestic firms in the prevalence and size of the impact of COVID-19 on sales. Our findings reveal significant differences between MNCs and domestic firms, especially when accounting for the interplay between foreign ownership and international trade. Exporting MNCs are significantly less likely to experience a negative sales impact; this finding is robust to controlling for firm characteristics including size, age and productivity and the use of a propensity score reweighting approach based on the likelihood that a firm was foreign owned prior to the onset of the pandemic. Regarding the impact of the pandemic on the level of sales decrease, trading MNCs experience a significantly smaller negative impact. However, MNCs with joint high levels of imports and exports sustain a larger negative effect. MNCs operating in countries and sectors characterised by a high degree of participation in international production networks are less affected by the pandemic. When controlling for the interaction between MNCs and international trade, we also find a direct positive effect of foreign ownership on the size of sales decrease, representing a liability of foreignness effect.
引用
收藏
页码:1967 / 1998
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The heterogeneous competitive effects of trade and foreign direct investment: Firm-level evidence for European countries
    Weche, John P.
    WORLD ECONOMY, 2018, 41 (03): : 801 - 830
  • [22] International trade and firm-level markups when location and quality matter
    Bellone, Flora
    Musso, Patrick
    Nesta, Lionel
    Warzynski, Frederic
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, 2016, 16 (01) : 67 - 91
  • [23] Employment, skill structure and international trade: Firm-level evidence for France
    Biscourp, Pierre
    Kramarz, Francis
    JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS, 2007, 72 (01) : 22 - 51
  • [24] Retained Earnings, Foreign Portfolio Ownership, and the German Current Account: A Firm-Level Approach
    Goldbach, Stefan
    Harms, Philipp
    Jochem, Axel
    Nitsch, Volker
    Weichenrieder, Alfons J.
    GERMAN ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2024, 25 (02) : 127 - 145
  • [25] Does foreign ownership promote environmental protection? Evidence from firm-level data
    Balaguer, Jacint
    Cuadros, Ana
    Garcia-Quevedo, Jose
    SMALL BUSINESS ECONOMICS, 2023, 60 (01) : 227 - 244
  • [26] Does foreign ownership promote environmental protection? Evidence from firm-level data
    Jacint Balaguer
    Ana Cuadros
    Jose García-Quevedo
    Small Business Economics, 2023, 60 : 227 - 244
  • [27] Firm-level short selling and the local COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from China
    He, Jingbin
    Ma, Xinru
    Wei, Qu
    ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2022, 113
  • [28] Foreign Ownership and Labor Demand by Skill in the Tunisian Manufacturing Industry: A Firm-Level Investigation
    Zmami, Mourad
    Ben-Salha, Ousama
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF THE ECONOMICS OF BUSINESS, 2020, 27 (02) : 177 - 201
  • [29] Examining the adaptive market hypothesis with calendar effects: International evidence and the impact of COVID-19
    Bassiouny, Aliaa
    Kiryakos, Mariam
    Tooma, Eskandar
    GLOBAL FINANCE JOURNAL, 2023, 56
  • [30] Foreign outsourcing and firm-level characteristics: Evidence from Japanese manufacturers
    Tomiura, E
    JOURNAL OF THE JAPANESE AND INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIES, 2005, 19 (02) : 255 - 271