2,032 research outputs found
Internationalisation of SMEs and firm performance: evidences from Bangladesh
One of the key objectives of this paper is to identify the impacts of internationalisation of
SMEs on firm performance. Although there have been a number of research that examined
the relationship between SME internationalisation and firm performance, research from the
context of smaller developing economies are really scant. This is against the fact that SMEs
are main vehicle for growth in those economies and extensive research on various dimensions
of SMEs including its impact on firm performance may help to better understand the
operational aspects of SMEs in those economies. Using primary data and structural equation
modelling to analyse those data, the paper has found that internationalisation of SMEs has
significant impact on both financial and non-financial performance of SMEs in Bangladesh.
More specifically, the paper has found that internationalisation impacts in two dimensions
(Financial impacts and non-financial impacts) with 8 indicators (higher sales, higher profit,
assets maximization, market expansion, competitive advantage, better reputation, better
customer service and added knowledge)
OPTIMAL CONTRACTS FOR EXPLORATION WITH COST RECOVERY OF AN EXHAUSTIBLE NATURAL RESOURCE UNDER ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION
Exploration of an exhaustible resource with cost recovery under asymmetric information about cost is modeled and analyzed employing Principal-Agent theory. Allocation of lower than full information level of effort for the high-cost firms is found socially optimal. However, distortion is less in a two-stage process of exploration and extraction.Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Test of Weak Form of Efficiency in Emerging Markets: A South Asian Evidence
This study examines the weak form of efficiency of three South Asian markets named as Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE), Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) and Karachi Stock Exchange (KSE) for a period between January 2000 to June 2010. Data used in the study is monthly closing values of the indices of the said exchanges. The study uses autocorrelation test, unit root tests, co-integration test and Granger causality test to examine the efficiency of the markets. Empirical result reveals that the returns do not follow normal distribution and the distributions are leptokurtic. Autocorrelation and unit root tests imply that the data series are stationary. Johansen co-integration test indicates that there is common stochastic trend shared by the markets. Granger causality test implies that the knowledge of the past return behavior in one market is unlikely to improve forecasts of returns of another market with some exceptions. So tests result implies that the markets are not weak form of efficient
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