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Published in: Eurasian Business Review 2/2021

03-04-2020 | Regular Article

Sticky cost behavior: evidence from small and medium sized enterprises in Turkey

Author: Hakan Özkaya

Published in: Eurasian Business Review | Issue 2/2021

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Abstract

Evidence regarding cost behavior mostly comes from big listed companies. Cost behavior of SMEs, which are backbones of economy, is under-researched. This paper intends to fill this gap by providing evidence on cost stickiness from SMEs in an emerging economy. Cost stickiness refers to the notion that costs increase and decrease by differing magnitude for a specific change in the activity volume. Analyses of data for Turkish SMEs from 2013 to 2017 indicate that; total costs, cost of goods sold and selling, general and administrative costs are sticky in varying degrees. Cost stickiness of total costs and selling general and administrative costs reverses following a revenue decline period. The degree of stickiness of all cost categories is positively related to asset intensity and employee intensity while the degree of stickiness of total costs and cost of goods sold is negatively related to debt intensity. The degree of cost stickiness is higher for small revenue decreases than for greater revenue decreases. Finally, firms in different industries have different cost behaviors.

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Footnotes
1
To check the degree of multicollinearity, the variance inflation factor (VIF) for independent variables are calculated. The centered VIF value for the variables is the same since there are only two variables in Model I and it is 1.63. First introduced by Marquardt (1970), VIF value indicates an extreme degree of collinearity when it is higher than 10. Some subsequent studies argue that multicollinearity leads to poorly estimated regression coefficients when VIF values exceed 5 (Paul 2006). While the extreme collinearity is problematic, less than extreme collinearity has less impact on the results (Mason and Perreault 1991). Moreover, even the presence of near extreme multicollinearity (VIFs between 5 and 10) does not violate the least squares estimates’ being the best linear unbiased estimates (BLUE). The presence of multicollinearity inflates the standard errors of the coefficient by the square root of the VIF value estimated for that variable. That is standard errors for the coefficient of both independent variables are 1.28 (square root of 1.63) times as large as they would be if they had been uncorrelated with each other (Allison 1999). Likewise, the unaffected t statistics for the variables would be the reported t-statistics divided by 1.28. Thus, neither the coefficient values, nor their significance values are adversely affected by the presence of collinearity for Model I. Although VIF values and their adjustments are not reported for each estimation result table, the same holds for other models as well.
 
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Metadata
Title
Sticky cost behavior: evidence from small and medium sized enterprises in Turkey
Author
Hakan Özkaya
Publication date
03-04-2020
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Eurasian Business Review / Issue 2/2021
Print ISSN: 1309-4297
Electronic ISSN: 2147-4281
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40821-020-00156-8

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