Browsing by Subject "Panel Data"
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Item Open Access Employment effects of foreign direct investment in the Turkish manufacturing industry(2010) Yiğit, MerveThis thesis studies the causal e§ects of foreign ownership on plant employment of varying degrees of FDI. I not only examine the employment e§ects of FDI ináows by using standard deÖnition of FDI as is standard in the literature, but I also look into the possible di§erentiale e§ects of di§erent levels of FDI and identify these e§ects at the 10, 25, 50, 75 and 100 percent foreign ownership in plants, respectively. These e§ects are tested using plant-level data from Annual Manufacturing Industry Statistics on the Turkish Manufacturing industry. To control for the possible selection-bias, a di§erence-in-di§erences approach is combined with propensity score matching. The advantage of this method is that it allows observing the divergence in the paths of employment between the treated plants and the matched control plants. It is shown that foreign acquisition in Turkish manufacturing industry leads to a signiÖcant increase in employment in the acquired plants when the standard deÖnition of FDI is used. The positive and statistically signiÖcant e§ects become visible in the acquisition year and continue in the subsequent periods. I Önd that after three years, the acquired plants outperform the control group in terms of employment by 21 percentage points. The signiÖcant positive employment e§ects are also observed when I only focus on the private establishments, excluding public establishments from the sample. The analysis also suggests that the positive employment e§ects occur together with increases in output and productivity. However, it is observed that as the dominance of foreign partners increases in foreign ownership percentages the employment e§ects of FDI ináows begin to decrease.Item Open Access Sustainable growth of non-financial firms : evidence from emerging economies(2017-03) Mubeen, MuhammadHiggins’ (1977, 1981, 2008) model of Sustainable growth has been widely used in corporate finance application. This research investigates whether Higgins’ model of sustainable growth is underestimated as suggested by the theoretical paper of Chen (2013). For this purpose, data of seven emerging economies between the years 2000 and 2015 have been used. Firms issuing secondary equity were identified from the data set. An independent t-test was used to test the difference of mean of growth for firms issuing secondary equity and firms not issuing secondary equity. Additionally, a panel regression model with random effect model is employed to identify the factors causing difference in sustainable growth and actual realized growth. The results show that Higgins model of sustainable growth is underestimated. While identifying the possible factor of underestimation, secondary equity issue is a significant factor in five emerging economies (Pakistan, India, Korea, Indonesia and Brazil) and insignificant in two emerging economies (China and Turkey). Moreover, while exploring firm-specific factors as a reason of underestimation of SGR model, we found that in the case of nonfinancial firms, leverage and size are playing important roles whereas profitability and dividend policy yield mixed results.