Abstract

The main objective of the present thesis is to examine and evaluate the impact of various factors on the growth patterns of firms. In doing so, we make use of a dataset on firms that operate in the Greek sectors of manufacturing and services during the period 1995-2001. Intra-industry growth dynamics of firms are analyzed in the context of the stochastic theory of growth, which is expressed mainly by Gibrat’s Law. In this framework, initial firm size is considered as a critical variable for the investigation of the behaviour of firm growth. At the same time, the present thesis investigates whether relevant factors - such as firm size, firm age, persistence of firm growth, financing constraints, Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) - play any role in the growth process of firms. The thesis consists of 6 chapters. The first chapter provides a short introduction in the subject of thesis. Chapter 2 provides an extensive empirical and theoretical literature review on firm growth. Chapter 3 investigates the dynamic growth process of firms in the context of Gibrat’s Law and considers the potential persistence of firm growth over time, using a dataset of 3685 firms that operate in the Greek manufacturing sector. In this empirical chapter, applying the OLS and the delta method, the results suggest for the total sample that small surviving firms have a higher potential of growth than larger ones. The classification of firms in 4 size groups and 4 age groups yields interesting findings. In particular, it is observed that the growth rates of micro, small and young firms tend to persist in subsequent periods. On the other hand, the growth patterns of medium, large and old firms follow a random walk. Chapter 4 examines the growth patterns of 4975 firms that act in the Greek service sector, focusing particularly on the role of ICT. This empirical analysis uses the GMM system technique to estimate separately each of the 14 available disaggregated service industries. The results show that the firm growth patterns are heterogeneous for different ICT groups of industries and the dynamic growth process of firms in ICT-related services might not resemble the firm growth patterns holding in manufacturing. Chapter 5 examines the impact of financing constraints on the growth of 1734 firms that operate in the Greek manufacturing sector. At the same time, this empirical analysis investigates possible factors that affect the ability of firms to have access to external finance, using the GMM system method in order to estimate the examined growth models. By classifying firms in 3 age groups and in 2 major groups of industries with respect to their intensity in the use of ICT, it is found that young firms face greater financing constraints than their older counterparts. On the contrary, in ICT sectors young firms appear to be able to acquire similar access to external finance as the older firms. The last chapter, summarizes the main findings of the three empirical chapters, points at relevant policy implications, limitations and directions for further research.

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