Publication:
Dynamic capital structure and political patronage: the case of Malaysia
Loading...
Abstracts views
61
Views & Download
13
Date
2014
SDG:
Abstract
This paper investigates the effect of political patronage on firms' capital structure. The evidence is from Malaysia, a country characterised by relationship-capitalism, and covers 1988 to 2009. Using a system GMM estimator we find firms set leverage targets and adjust towards them following deviations at the rate of 28% per annum. Next, we construct a natural experiment and use a difference-in-differences model to investigate if the strategic financing decisions of politically patronised firms differ from non-connected firms after an exogenous shock caused by the 1997 Asian crisis. Our results unambiguously demonstrate a significant difference in the capital structure of patronised firms relative to non-connected firms following the exogenous shock but only for the crisis period 1998–2001. After 2002 the capital structures of patronised and non-connected firms are statistically equivalent.
Keywords
Asian financial crisis , Capital structural , Political patronage
Citation
Ebrahim, M., Girmab, S., Mohd Rasid, M. E. S., & Williams, J. (2014). Dynamic capital structure and political patronage: the case of Malaysia. International Review of Financial Analysis, 31, 117–128. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.irfa.2013.11.004
Publisher
Elsevier