Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from Spain

This paper examines how exporting cooperatives evolve and differ from those that are focused on the domestic market. We use a Spanish firm-level panel data set spanning 26 years (1991–2016). We work with a wide set of variables that reflect cooperatives’ performance: sales, gross operating margin, p...

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Main Authors: Mercè Sala-Ríos, Mariona Farré-Perdiguer, Teresa Torres-Solé
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-10-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8385
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spelling doaj-99b1811744fc440886a312d6f2dc88452020-11-25T01:59:26ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-10-01128385838510.3390/su12208385Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from SpainMercè Sala-Ríos0Mariona Farré-Perdiguer1Teresa Torres-Solé2Applied Economics Department, University of Lleida, 25001 Lleida, SpainApplied Economics Department, University of Lleida, 25001 Lleida, SpainApplied Economics Department, University of Lleida, 25001 Lleida, SpainThis paper examines how exporting cooperatives evolve and differ from those that are focused on the domestic market. We use a Spanish firm-level panel data set spanning 26 years (1991–2016). We work with a wide set of variables that reflect cooperatives’ performance: sales, gross operating margin, productivity, wages, employment, capital intensity, skilled-labour intensity and R&D effort. The analysis deals with two working hypotheses: (i) Exporting cooperatives perform better than non-exporters, (ii) exporting boosts performance growth. With regard to the first one, we provide evidence that exporting cooperatives outperform those that are focused on the domestic market. Cooperatives that export are more productive, larger and pay higher wages than non-exporters. In addition, they are more capital- and skilled-labour intensive. The second hypothesis does not find such conclusive results. Only employment and skilled-labour intensity of exporters show significant faster performance growth than non-exporters. Results can lend weak support to the fact that exporting boosts performance growth.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8385cooperativesexportsexport premiumself-selectionlearning-by-exportingpanel data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mercè Sala-Ríos
Mariona Farré-Perdiguer
Teresa Torres-Solé
spellingShingle Mercè Sala-Ríos
Mariona Farré-Perdiguer
Teresa Torres-Solé
Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from Spain
Sustainability
cooperatives
exports
export premium
self-selection
learning-by-exporting
panel data
author_facet Mercè Sala-Ríos
Mariona Farré-Perdiguer
Teresa Torres-Solé
author_sort Mercè Sala-Ríos
title Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from Spain
title_short Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from Spain
title_full Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from Spain
title_fullStr Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from Spain
title_full_unstemmed Exporting and Firms’ Performance—What about Cooperatives? Evidence from Spain
title_sort exporting and firms’ performance—what about cooperatives? evidence from spain
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-10-01
description This paper examines how exporting cooperatives evolve and differ from those that are focused on the domestic market. We use a Spanish firm-level panel data set spanning 26 years (1991–2016). We work with a wide set of variables that reflect cooperatives’ performance: sales, gross operating margin, productivity, wages, employment, capital intensity, skilled-labour intensity and R&D effort. The analysis deals with two working hypotheses: (i) Exporting cooperatives perform better than non-exporters, (ii) exporting boosts performance growth. With regard to the first one, we provide evidence that exporting cooperatives outperform those that are focused on the domestic market. Cooperatives that export are more productive, larger and pay higher wages than non-exporters. In addition, they are more capital- and skilled-labour intensive. The second hypothesis does not find such conclusive results. Only employment and skilled-labour intensity of exporters show significant faster performance growth than non-exporters. Results can lend weak support to the fact that exporting boosts performance growth.
topic cooperatives
exports
export premium
self-selection
learning-by-exporting
panel data
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/20/8385
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