Publication | Closed Access
Releasing Constraints to Growth or Pushing on a String? Policies and Performance of Mexican Micro-Firms
122
Citations
29
References
2009
Year
Industrial PolicyEconomic DevelopmentEntrepreneurshipEconomic GrowthIndustrial OrganizationBarrier To EntryFirm CharacteristicsEconomic AnalysisTax PaymentsInternational BusinessFirm-level DataEconomicsCredit MarketBusiness GrowthFinanceMicroeconomicsEconomic PolicyBusinessEconometricsBusiness StrategyMicro Finance InstitutionFinancial StructureCapital StructureMexican Micro-firms
Abstract Using firm-level data from Mexico, this paper investigates the firm characteristics associated with participation in credit markets, access to training, tax payments and membership in business associations. We find that firms which participate in these institutions exhibit significantly higher profits. Moreover, firms that borrow from formal or informal sources and those that pay taxes are significantly more likely to stay in business but firms that received credit exhibit lower rates of income growth. These results persist when firm characteristics that are arguably correlated with unobserved entrepreneurial ability are controlled for. Our findings suggest that the significant within-country differences in firm productivity observed in developing economies are due in part to market and government failures that limit the ability of micro-firms to reach their optimal sizes.
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