Results 141 to 150 of about 280 (183)
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Zombie firms in Italy: a critical assessment

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2019
This note shows the consequences of different methodological choices for the estimates of the incidence of zombie firms in Italy. We use as a benchmark the influential measure proposed by the OECD (Adalet McGowan et al. 2017a and 2017b) which identifies zombie firms based on a combination of firm age and values of the interest coverage ratio (operating
Rodano, Giacomo, Sette, Enrico
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On the identification of zombie firms

2023
A survey of the most prominent definitions of zombie firms, together with their replication on a common dataset for euro area firms spanning the years 2004-2019, shows limited overlap and low comparability in the sets of firms identified by several prominent studies.
Mingarelli, Luca   +2 more
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Zombie Firms, State Subsidies, and Aggregate Productivity

Economica, 2023
Abstract Using firm‐level data from the manufacturing sector in China, I document that zombie firms are larger and less productive, and receive higher subsidy rates on average. The difference in subsidy rates between zombies and non‐zombies reflects both the selection criteria of zombies and the underlying joint distribution of ...
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The Financing and Investment Crowding-out Effect of Zombie Firms on Non-zombie Firms: Evidence from China

Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 2020
Using a database on Chinese listed firms in 2006–2016, we identify Chinese zombie firms and the characteristics of their distribution by introducing the factors of government overprotection and ban...
Yiqiu Wang, Yunyi Zhu
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Distressed firms, zombie firms and zombie lending: A taxonomy

Journal of Banking & Finance, 2021
Laura Álvarez Román   +2 more
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Are zombie firms really contagious?

2023
We test the hypotheses that zombie firms are less productive and have lower employment growth and lower gross investment ratios than non-zombie firms in the same industry sector and that they are a source of contagion for the latter. Ever since Caballero et al.
Ernst, Norbert, Sigmund, Michael
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Zombies Firms in Ecuador: The Case of Communication Firms

2022 17th Iberian Conference on Information Systems and Technologies (CISTI), 2022
Reinaldo Armas, Angel Higuerey
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Risk-Taking by Zombie Firms?

1990
Abstract The “zombie effect” is the additional incentive to borrow funds and make risky investments created by insolvency of a firm. The zombie effect can be neutralized by risk sensitivity in the cost of credit to the insolvent firm. It can be quite strong if the insolvent firm can obtain credit at risk-insensitive costs and receives
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Zombie Firms and Markups

Journal of Industrial Economics and Business, 2021
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Fictitious Capital, Valorisation, Zombie-Firms

2023
In the years leading up the 2008-09 crisis, the leverage ratio has increased. At the end of Q3 2020, the IMF’s Global Debt Database shows that total global debt reached US$275 tn. A not insignificant part of this debt is fictitious capital. Usually, a share of the global capital stock is inactive, while the remainder is valorised at a low profit rate ...
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