Economics of Transition and Institutional Change, volume 29, issue 2, pages 319-341
How credit constraints affect small and medium enterprises' strategic employment decisions and employees' labour outcomes: Evidence from Vietnam 1
Thang Ngoc Bach
1
,
Charles Harvie
2
,
Thanh Hai Le
2
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-02-10
scimago Q2
SJR: 0.367
CiteScore: 1.7
Impact factor: 1
ISSN: 25776975, 25776983
Economics and Econometrics
Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous)
Abstract
This study makes use of rich firm-level and linked firm-employee datasets that span the 2009–2015 period in Vietnam to examine how SMEs' credit constraints affect their strategic employment decisions and employees' labour outcomes. Our results show that constrained SMEs enlarge total employment by employing relatively more temporary workers and paying their employees relatively lower wages than unconstrained borrowing firms. Meanwhile, discouraged firms, mostly informal businesses, do not behave differently from unconstrained counterparts. In order to maintain a stable employment portfolio, discouraged firms are relatively more willing to reward their employees with an overtime payment.
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