Working PaperFirst publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-2217

World Market Access of Emerging-Market Firms: The Role of Foreign Ownership and Access to External Finance

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Date of first publication2014-11
Date of publication in PubData 2025-08-28

Language of the resource

English

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Part of ISSN: 1860-5508
Working Paper Series in Economics

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Case provider

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Abstract

This paper uses micro-data fromtheWorld Bank Investment Climate Surveys 2002-2006 to investigate how foreign ownership and access to external finance affect the likelihood of manufacturers in emerging markets to export and/or import. Applying propensity score matching to control for differences across firms in terms of labor productivity, size, etc., we find that foreign ownership and access to external finance are statistically significant determinants of the likelihood that a firm will export or import. Foreign ownership has a large positive impact on the likelihood to engage in direct trade but a negative effect on the likelihood to trade through intermediaries; the effects vary across upper and lower middle income countries. Access to external finance has a modest but positive effect on the likelihood to engage in any of the modes of connecting with foreign customers or suppliers.

Keywords

International Trade; Foreign Ownership; Developing Countries; Multinational Enterprise

Number of the series contribution

325

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330 :: Wirtschaft

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Research