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Three essays on international busines

Posted on:2004-11-03Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:McGill University (Canada)Candidate:Terra, Paulo Renato SoaresFull Text:PDF
GTID:1466390011967917Subject:Management
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation is presented in the form of three essays on International Business studies. The purpose of the dissertation is to address the interdependence between the macroeconomy and finance at three levels of analysis: the conceptual level, the economic policy level, and the corporate policy level. Each essay addresses one of these levels. The empirical focus is on developing countries in general---and Latin America in particular---because in recent history these countries have experienced large economic fluctuations and major regime shifts. The introduction surveys the literature on the relationship between the financial sector and economic growth. The first essay synthesizes the literature concerning the benefits, risks, and costs of financial liberalization in developing countries and presents illustrative data on its recent implementation and outcomes. The second essay investigates the causal relationships between real activity, inflation, and financial assets' returns in seven major Latin American economies (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Peru, and Venezuela) over the period 1976--1999, using vector autoregression analysis to explore the puzzling negative relationship observed elsewhere between real stock returns and inflation. The third essay investigates whether macroeconomic factors are as important as traditional firm-specific and country-specific factors as determinants of capital structure for a sample of firms from the seven Latin American countries mentioned above in the period 1986--2000 using panel data analysis. Empirical comparisons are drawn with industrial economies: the G-7 economies in the second essay and a subset of United States firms in the third. The final chapter presents the conclusions of this dissertation. The main finding is that differences between advanced and emerging economies in the relationship among economic variables do not seem as clear-cut as often assumed by academicians, policymakers, and practitioners. The results of this dissertation indicate that future International Business research should focus on the development of sound universal theoretical models and their empirical application to a variety of country-specific situations with the objective of refining the theoretical models by sorting out what country-specific factors are indeed relevant, and how these factors can be incorporated back into universal theories. More attention to firm-specific factors is also needed.
Keywords/Search Tags:Essay, Three, International, Factors, Dissertation
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