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Did Accession to the EU Affect Small and Large Firms Differently? The Case of the Austrian Retail and Wholesale Sector 

Published: Tuesday 20 August 2002   


Did Accession to the EU Affect Small and Large Firms Differently? The Case of the Austrian Retail and Wholesale Sector

Abstract

This paper, published by the European Integration Online Papers in July 2002, analyses the effects that Austria's accession to the EU had on several key financial ratios of small business firms in the retail and wholesale trade sectors.

These two industries were selected because before 1995 they were protected in many respects, thus vulnerable to increased competition after accession. The financial ratios selected are cash-flow per employed person, mean absolute deviation of cash-flow per employed person (as a variation-based risk measure), debt per employed person and financing cost as percentage of external debt. Together these four ratios determine a firm's creditworthiness.

The is based on micro data, which allows the author to consider the whole distribution of the ratios as compared to only aggregates as in other studies and to examine the scale effects within idustries. The data basis are balance sheets of more than 14,000 retail and 8,000 wholesale trade firms of all size classes during 1989-1996.

The study tests the hypothsis of a structural break in the year of Austria's accession to the EU and put particular emphasis on the question whether small and large firms were affected differently by that structural break.

You can download the

full text of the studyexternal from the European Integration Online Papers website.  

Source: European Integration Online Papers

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