Title of article
Soft budget constraint and expropriation: Evidence from privately-owned firms in China
Author/Authors
Hongbo Pan، نويسنده , , Minggui Yu، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages
10
From page
2065
To page
2074
Abstract
Using the data of privately-owned firms in Chinaʹs transition economy, the study examines the effects of soft budget constraint on the expropriation of minority shareholders. The study finds that, compared to small firms, large firms have higher bank loans and are more likely to get government subsidies. However, large firms show higher divergence between cash flow and control rights, more fund occupation by controlling shareholders, and lower market valuation. Moreover, these differences between large and small firms become particularly pronounced when the firms operate in the provinces with poorer fiscal conditions. When firm tax is substituted for firm size, the study gets the similar results. These findings suggest that soft budget constraint can mitigate the expropriation costs of controlling shareholders, and subsequently deteriorate the expropriation of minority shareholders.
Keywords
Bank loans , Expropriation , fiscal goal , Firm size , government subsidies , Soft budget constraint
Journal title
African Journal of Business Management
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
African Journal of Business Management
Record number
686499
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