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World Affairs Online
Does Autonomy Matter in State Owned Enterprises? Evidence from Performance Contracts in India
In: Economics of transition and institutional change, Band 27, Heft 3, S. 763-800
ISSN: 2577-6983
AbstractEmpirical evidence on the effect of managerial autonomy on the performance of state‐owned enterprises (SOE) is surprisingly scant despite autonomy being a preferred reform instrument over partial privatization in many countries. Using longitudinal data on performance contracts of state‐owned enterprises in India, this paper finds that managerial autonomy is associated with significant increases in enterprise profitability and efficiency. Further, using India's unique reform experience where both managerial autonomy and partial privatization were pursued side by side, the paper finds that while the positive effects of autonomy continue post‐partial privatization, the effects of partial privatization on performance are ambiguous. Specifically, once autonomy is controlled for, partial privatization has a positive effect on SOE profitability only after it crosses a critical level of government disinvestment. The findings suggest that organizational reforms such as granting managerial autonomy can be an important policy instrument in improving SOE performance particularly in cases where governments are unable to make substantial disinvestments.
Debt and corporate governance in emerging economies Evidence from India1
In: Economics of transition, Band 16, Heft 2, S. 293-334
ISSN: 1468-0351
AbstractWe analyze the role of debt in corporate governance with respect to a large emerging economy, India, where debt has been an important source of external finance. Using cross‐sectional data on listed manufacturing firms we estimate, simultaneously, the relation between Tobin's Q and leverage for three years, 1996, 2000 and 2003. Our analysis indicates that while in the early years of institutional change, debt did not have any disciplinary effect on either standalone or group affiliated firms, the disciplinary effect appeared in the later years as institutions became more market oriented. We also find limited evidence of debt being used as an expropriation mechanism in group firms that are more vulnerable to such expropriation. In general, our results highlight the role of ownership structures and institutions in debt governance.
Libéralisation, mode de financement et performances des entreprises en Inde
In: Tiers-Monde, Band 42, Heft 165, S. 61-82
Women Director Interlocks and Firm Performance Evidence from India
In: PBFJ-D-23-00916
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