This article claims that the basic relationships between, on the one side, the small firms’ hazard of exit, and, on the other side, the GDP growth rate and the industry growth rate are U-shaped. This means that there are more births and deaths for this segment of manufacturing enterprises during both cyclical downturns and booms in the economy. Higher competition in the economy in the first case comes from necessity entrepreneurs and in the second case from opportunity ones. The article also claims that the quadratic specification would rarely be the most adequate, since other combinations of different pairs of exponents would certainly better capture nuances of the relationships being regressed, in view of the fact that the actual U-shaped...
We would like to thank Professor Mark Hart, Dr Neha Prashar and Dr Anastasia Ri for compiling our An...
The extensive empirical literature on the validity of Gibrat’s law does not in general verify the la...
This paper explores the relationship between the relative size of the Small and Medium Enterprise (S...
This article claims that the basic relationships between, on the one side, size, growth and age of t...
This article reports results from an empirical search for the determinants of the very small firms’ ...
The major claim of this article is twofold, that is, that fixed assets in small manufacturing enterp...
Survey evidence on small firms’ perceived constraints might provide useful information on the effect...
The liability of smallness assumption suggests that smaller firms face higher exit risks. However, d...
We present an empirical analysis on the determinants of growth for a sample of Italian small and med...
The importance of small firms in a country’s development cannot be over-emphasized. In particular, i...
In small economies, domestic market size constraints are expected to influence the economic growth p...
Recent empirical studies show that small firms are confronted with a lower likelihood of survival th...
Davis, Haltiwanger & Schuh (1993; 1996) suggested that the belief that small firms are major con...
A number of studies have tried to explain SME and how they affect economic growth. These studies hav...
This article aims to explore learning and selection effects of productivity change for three classes...
We would like to thank Professor Mark Hart, Dr Neha Prashar and Dr Anastasia Ri for compiling our An...
The extensive empirical literature on the validity of Gibrat’s law does not in general verify the la...
This paper explores the relationship between the relative size of the Small and Medium Enterprise (S...
This article claims that the basic relationships between, on the one side, size, growth and age of t...
This article reports results from an empirical search for the determinants of the very small firms’ ...
The major claim of this article is twofold, that is, that fixed assets in small manufacturing enterp...
Survey evidence on small firms’ perceived constraints might provide useful information on the effect...
The liability of smallness assumption suggests that smaller firms face higher exit risks. However, d...
We present an empirical analysis on the determinants of growth for a sample of Italian small and med...
The importance of small firms in a country’s development cannot be over-emphasized. In particular, i...
In small economies, domestic market size constraints are expected to influence the economic growth p...
Recent empirical studies show that small firms are confronted with a lower likelihood of survival th...
Davis, Haltiwanger & Schuh (1993; 1996) suggested that the belief that small firms are major con...
A number of studies have tried to explain SME and how they affect economic growth. These studies hav...
This article aims to explore learning and selection effects of productivity change for three classes...
We would like to thank Professor Mark Hart, Dr Neha Prashar and Dr Anastasia Ri for compiling our An...
The extensive empirical literature on the validity of Gibrat’s law does not in general verify the la...
This paper explores the relationship between the relative size of the Small and Medium Enterprise (S...