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2003 | Buch

Barriers to Entry and Growth of New Firms in Early Transition

A Comparative Study of Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Albania and Lithuania

herausgegeben von: Iraj Hoshi, Ewa Balcerowicz, Leszek Balcerowicz

Verlag: Springer US

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inefficient and uncompetitive enterprises especially from the over-grown industrial sector. These initial conditions meant that, in the early stages of transition, the volume of entries and exits will be, by necessity, very high ­ reflecting the large scale changes that had to take place before these economies attain a macroeconomic structure consistent with their level of development and with the needs of a market-based economy open to internationalcompetition. One of the main elements of the reform programme in all economies in transition was the liberalisation of entry conditions. Along with the liberalisation of prices and foreign trade, appropriate measures facilitating the establishment of new enterprises were approved in the very early phase of reforms in all of these countries. The effectiveness of liberalised entry conditions, of course, depends on the presence of appropriate legal and institutional framework in which new firms will operate. The establishment of a conducive legal and institutional environment, however, takes much longer. In practice, new firms come into existence before the rules of the game are properly established. These rules develop gradually and are not always, and everywhere, consistent with the aim of liberalising the entry conditions. The conditions facing new firms, therefore, have fluctuated in some countries in accordance with changes in the political environment and in line with the strength of different lobbies and interest groups.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction and Overview
Abstract
This book is about barriers to entry facing entrepreneurs in early transition. Barriers may be defined in a variety of ways — any factor that increases the unit production cost of the new entrants, or any impediments that imposes a cost on new entrants but not on the incumbents. The main aim of the book is to investigate the nature and impact of barriers to entry in five countries at different stages of transition, with differing development backgrounds and different traditions. The study is based on the experience of new firms in Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Lithuania and Albania — the first three having reached an advanced stage of transition and the latter two having embarked on the transition process later thus lagging behind the front-runners. The study focuses on the legal, fiscal, institutional and financial factors that impede new firm entries and slow down the expansion of newly established firms in each country.
Ewa Balcerowicz, Leszek Balcerowicz, Iraj Hoshi
Chapter 2. Fiscal and Regulatory Impediments to the Entry of New Firms in Five Transition Economies
Abstract
The massive deregulation of economic activities was a fundamental feature of transformation in all Central and East European countries. The allpervasive system of state control established under socialism was inappropriate for these transforming economies and had to be replaced by a completely different set of rules and regulations designed to facilitate the establishment of a market economy. While the vast machinery of the former system was being dismantled, the state had to assume new functions and formulate the ‘rules of the game’ appropriate for the operation of the new system. Given the legacy of the old system and the manner of its disintegration, new rules had to be devised at the same time as the new system was taking shape. It was therefore inevitable that the new regulatory framework would develop unevenly in different countries and that some countries would suffer from a ‘regulatory vacuum’, a near-total-absence of an appropriate regulatory framework for the protection of citizens’ economic interests.1 In other countries, many of the old rules and regulations were retained until new ones could be promulgated — a policy broadly aimed at preventing opportunism.
Iraj Hoshi, Jan Mladek
Chapter 3. Investment and Finance in De Novo Private Firms: Empirical Results from the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland
Abstract
There is a widespread view among economists that imperfections in capital markets are particularly severe in the new market economies in Central and Eastern Europe and that they are particularly likely to affect de novo private firms (Cornelli et al. 1996; Anderson et al 1996). Since the beginning of transition there was a concern that new private firms, about which lenders have less information, would be crowded out in capital markets by the established state-owned enterprises. It has been argued that small firms access to external finance would be difficult because they are de novo, have no credit history, track record, collateral, etc. This concern is common to small and medium-sized enterprises in any economy, whether in transition or not. According to (1988), “during periods of tight credit, small and medium-sized borrowers are often denied loans in favour of better quality borrowers”. More specifically for transition countries, banks were supposed to prefer lending to the existing state-owned enterprises which had political leverage and with which they had developed long-term relationships before the transition.
Andrzej Bratkowski, Irena Grosfeld, Jacek Rostowski
Chapter 4. Foreign Direct Investment in Small Firms
Abstract
The primary focus of research on foreign direct investment (FDI) has been on investments of multinational companies. Statistical data is generally provided by large investors and, thus, any statistical analysis is ab ovo biased towards large investments. The case study evidence is also dominated by the big business. Small investors usually do not provide long, complicated stories to capture the attention of economists or sociologists. Still, small investments play an important role in the overall FDI in transition economies. Their weight is important not only numerically, but also in terms of their economic performance.
Miklós Szanyi
Chapter 5. Barriers to Entry and the Unofficial Economy
Abstract
Ten years after the transition period began we observe a very mixed picture of progress across the transition countries. Growth rates have differed markedly during the 1990s, to the point where many countries have still not reached their 1989 level of GDP, but others, noticeably Poland, have far surpassed it. There are many factors that have contributed to this difference in performance, including their initial conditions, how long a country was under communist control, its economic policies since the end of communism and the type of governments that have come to power. One interesting difference between the transition countries is the extent to which they have been successful in creating new small enterprises. Not surprisingly, those countries where private enterprise was allowed before 1989 now have the largest number of small private firms relative to the size of their population, namely Hungary and Poland. Interestingly, it is these countries that have performed best macro-economically. Thus, it would be useful to determine what factors have caused small private firms to be established at a faster rate in some countries than others.
Jane Christian
Chapter 6. From Foe to Friend in 10 Years: Private Business Development in Hungary 1989–1998
Abstract
Hungary was known for its vague experiments of economic reforms after 1968. Reform steps were aimed at the introduction of the framework and mechanisms of a market economy in order to improve personal and corporate performances. The degree of freedom in corporate decision-making was increased in a large number of state-owned companies while central planning concentrated more on measures that tried to influence corporate activities indirectly. The experiments did not challenge the basic economic structures and the big business in Hungary, but allowed the creation of partnerships of private persons. Thus, corporate managers, as well as ambitious private persons could generate some degree of entrepreneurship.
Miklós Szanyi
Chapter 7. Barriers to Entry and their Impact on Private Sector Growth in Poland
Abstract
At the beginning of transition Poland was already far ahead of other former socialist countries with regard to the role of the private sector in the economy. For example, Polish farmers were never deprived of their land, as it was the rule in other countries under the communist regime.1 With 4 million people self-employed and employed in private farms Poland was unique amongst countries embarking on the road from a “planned” to a market economy. Outside agriculture, a further 1.8 million people worked in private companies, constituting 13.3% of employment in non-agricultural enterprises.
Ewa Balcerowicz
Chapter 8. Barriers to Entry and their Impact on Firms’ Performance in Albania
Abstract
Nearly 50 years after World War II, Albania was the most isolated country in Central and Eastern Europe. It had an extremely centralised economy and a poorly performing state —which was the only owner of the property created by the contribution of generations of Albanian people (Clunies-Ross and Sudar 1998(). Political changes started in 1990, when the first opposition party, the Democratic Party, was created. In 1991, following serious riots in main cities, a coalition government was created. Its economic programme contained measures of macroeconomic stabilisation, liberalisation of prices and foreign trade, privatisation and the development of convertible currency. However, the coalition government could not embrace reforms and the disagreements over these policies led to the withdrawal of the Democratic Party from the coalition government in December 1991, and a halt in the implementation of the 1991 programme. Only in 1992, after new elections, when the Democratic Party gained a majority, did the government start to implement the programme of transition in Albania which, by then, was the last country in Central and Eastern Europe to embark on economic transformation.
Lindita Xhillari, Shqiponja Telhaj
Chapter 9. Barriers to Entry of New Firms in the Czech Republic
Abstract
At the beginning of the 20th century, the Czech Lands were the most industrially developed part of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy, competing technologically and commercially with the most advanced countries in Europe. By 1930s, Czechoslovakia — which was formed after the break-up of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy in 1918 — ranked amongst the ten major European industrial countries, enjoying a strong tradition of craftsmen skilled in producing machinery and other manufactures and of businessmen adept in exporting these goods. Incomes were high, and the well-developed economy had succeeded in forging close financial and industrial links with the rest of Europe.
Jan Mládek, Iraj Hoshi
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Barriers to Entry and Growth of New Firms in Early Transition
herausgegeben von
Iraj Hoshi
Ewa Balcerowicz
Leszek Balcerowicz
Copyright-Jahr
2003
Verlag
Springer US
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4419-9234-5
Print ISBN
978-1-4613-4851-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9234-5