Hallward-Driemeier, Mary2012-03-192012-03-192009-10-01https://hdl.handle.net/10986/4276Size, age, sector, and productivity are commonly cited as factors determining a firm s survival. However, there are several dimensions of the investment climate in which the firm operates that affect whether it continues in business or exits. This paper uses new panel data from 27 Eastern European and Central Asian countries to test the importance of five areas of the business climate on firm exit: the efficiency of government services, access to finance, the extent of corruption or cronyism, the strength of property rights, and the degree of competition. The paper finds that weaknesses in these areas do affect the probability of firm exit largely in ways that undermine the Schumpeterian cleansing role of exit in raising overall productivity. Greater costs and regulatory burdens raise the probability that more productive firms exit, while less developed financial and legal institutions mitigate forces that would otherwise push less productive firms to exit. Thus, the more productive firms stand to gain the most from improvements in the investment climate, whether that is lowering transaction costs or improving market mechanisms. This holds both within countries and across countries. The impact of a particular investment climate measure can also differ significantly by type of firm, with the focus given to firm size. The differential impact on size can be significant at a size cutoff of 10 or more employees. As these are the firms that are near the threshold of many regulatory requirements, the implications are not just with regard to whether a firm remains in operation, but whether it does so in the formal sector.CC BY 3.0 IGOACCESS TO CAPITALACCESS TO CREDITACCESS TO EXTERNAL FINANCEACCESS TO FINANCEACCESS TO LOANSARREARSAVERAGE PRODUCTIVITYBANK POLICYBANKRUPTCYBARRIERBORROWINGBRIBEBRIBESBUDGET CONSTRAINTBUSINESS CLIMATEBUSINESS CYCLEBUSINESS ENVIRONMENTBUSINESS REGULATIONSCASH FLOWSCHECKSCOMPETITORSCORRUPTIONCOST OF CAPITALCOST OF FINANCECOUNTRY DUMMIESDEVELOPED COUNTRIESDEVELOPING COUNTRIESDEVELOPING COUNTRYDISCOUNT RATEDOMESTIC CREDITDUMMY VARIABLESECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTECONOMIC GROWTHECONOMIC PERFORMANCEEMPLOYEEEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT GROWTHENABLING ENVIRONMENTSENTERPRISE PERFORMANCEENTREPRENEURENTREPRENEURSENTREPRENEURSHIPEXPORTEREXPORTERSEXPOSUREFINANCE COSTFINANCIAL ACCESSFINANCIAL CONSTRAINTSFINANCIAL DEVELOPMENTFINANCIAL INSTITUTIONSFINANCIAL MARKETSFINANCIAL SERVICESFINANCIAL SYSTEMFINANCIAL SYSTEMSFIRM GROWTHFIRM PERFORMANCEFIRM SIZEFIRM SIZESFIXED COSTFIXED COSTSFOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTFOREIGN FIRMFOREIGN FIRMSFOREIGN OWNERSFOREIGN PARTNERFOREIGN PARTNERSFORMAL FINANCEGOVERNMENT SUBSIDIESINCOMEINDIVIDUAL FIRMINFLATIONINSECURE PROPERTYINSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTINSTRUMENTINTERNATIONAL BANKINVESTMENT CLIMATEINVESTMENT CLIMATESINVESTMENT DECISIONSJOB CREATIONJOINT VENTUREJOINT VENTURE PARTNERJOINT VENTURESJUDICIAL SYSTEMLABOR MARKETLACK OF COMPETITIONLACK OF PROPERTYLACK OF TRANSPARENCYLAND TITLESLEGAL CONSTRAINTSLEGAL DEVELOPMENTLEGAL INFRASTRUCTURELEGAL RIGHTSLEGAL SYSTEMLIMITED ACCESSLIMITED ACCESS TO FINANCELOANLOCAL FINANCIAL MARKETSMACROECONOMIC CONDITIONSMANUFACTURING INDUSTRIESMARKET CONDITIONSMARKET DISCIPLINEMARKET MECHANISMSMARKET REGULATIONSMARKET STRUCTUREMICROENTERPRISESMONETARY FUNDMULTINATIONALMULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONSMULTINATIONALSNEW PRODUCTSOUTPUTOVERHEAD COSTSPASTURESPOLICY MAKERSPOLITICAL ECONOMYPOWER OUTAGESPREFERENTIAL ACCESSPRIVATE PARTIESPRODUCERSPRODUCTIVITY GROWTHPROPERTY RIGHTSPROPERTY RIGHTS PROTECTIONREAL ESTATERED TAPEREGULATORY BURDENSREGULATORY REQUIREMENTSRETURNRULE OF LAWSMALL ENTERPRISESSMALL FIRMSSMESOCIAL CAPITALSTATE OWNED ENTERPRISESSUPPLIERSTAXATIONTHEORETICAL MODELSTRACK RECORDTRADE LIBERALIZATIONTRANSACTIONTRANSACTION COSTSTRANSACTIONS COSTSTRANSPARENCYTURNOVERUNIONWORLD DEVELOPMENT INDICATORSWho Survives? The Impact of Corruption, Competition and Property Rights across FirmsWorld Bank10.1596/1813-9450-5084