Abstract

Business confidence can be a very important predictor of future development and sustainability in a selected industry. It is one of the economic sentiment indicators belonging to the most important indicators of the health of the economy. This paper examines the relationships between the Business Confidence Indicator (BCI) of the manufacturing sector and the production, production prices, and interest rates of two neighbouring countries, the Slovak Republic and Hungary. These relationships are examined within the manufacturing sector because it has long been the driving force of sustainable economic development and has significant spill-over effects on the other sectors of the economy. A cluster analysis is performed with the aim of positioning the selected countries into clusters within the OECD countries in relation to the examined variables. Multiple regression models were used to verify the mentioned relationships between variables, separately for each of the two analysed countries. The coefficients of determination are not too high (Slovakia 0.5 and Hungary 0.38), but in the case of sentiment, they reach higher values than in comparable research. Data from the freely available OECD database was used. It can be concluded that the results show positive relationships between the BCI and the production and long-term interest rates, and negative relationships between the BCI and the Producer Prices Index (PPI) and short-term interest rates. The relationship with the short-term interest rates cannot be confirmed in the case of Hungary. Other differences are also shown in that a higher PPI can negatively affect the BCI more intensively in Hungary (regression coefficient 0.18), and that in the case of the Slovak Republic, it appears that the level of influence of the long-term interest rates on the BCI is higher than that in Hungary (the difference between the regression coefficients is 0.27). Practical implications are stated for relevant institutions in the country in three areas: (1) in support of increasing production; (2) in the regulation and subsidization of input production costs; (3) in the stabilization of the lending behaviour of financial institutions.

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