Koenraad De Backer
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
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Publication
Featured researches published by Koenraad De Backer.
Review of Industrial Organization | 2002
Koenraad De Backer; Leo Sleuwaegen
In analyzing firm entry and exit across Belgian manufacturing industries, this paper presents evidence that import competition and foreign direct investment discourage entry and stimulate exit of domestic entrepreneurs. These results are in line with theoretical occupational choice models that predict foreign direct investment would crowd out domestic entrepreneurs through their selections in product and labor markets. However, the empirical results also suggest that this crowding out effect may be moderated or even reversed in the long-run due to the long term positive effects of FDI on domestic entrepreneurship as a result of learning, demonstration, networking and linkage effects between foreign and domestic firms.
Economics Letters | 2003
Koenraad De Backer; Leo Sleuwaegen
In analyzing the distinctive contribution of foreign subsidiaries and domestic firms to productivity growth in aggregate Belgian manufacturing, this paper shows that foreign ownership is an important source of firm heterogeneity affecting productivity dynamics. Foreign firms have contributed disproportionately large to aggregate productivity growth, but more importantly reallocation processes differ significantly between the groups of foreign subsidiaries and domestic firms.
Review of World Economics | 2001
Leo Sleuwaegen; Koenraad De Backer
Multinational Firms, Market Integration, and Trade Structure: What Remains of the Standard-Goods Hypothesis? — In extending traditional empirical trade models to multinational firms, this paper shows the effect of the transfer of firm-specific technology and intangible assets by these firms on the structure of host countries. For Belgium, a small open economy with a large presence of foreign multinationals, this effect is of crucial importance and previous studies appeared to have produced biased results by neglecting it. The econometric results show how the large multinational presence induced by the European integration has shifted Belgium’s trade structure towards differentiated products, thereby challenging the standard-goods hypothesis which states that small countries tend to specialize in nondifferentiated products. Spain and Ireland have witnessed an increase in foreign direct investment and a shift in trade structure similar to Belgium after joining the EC.
Academy of International Business (AIB), UK Chapter | 1999
Koenraad De Backer; Leo Sleuwaegen
Archive | 2003
Leo Sleuwaegen; Koenraad De Backer
Archive | 2004
Leo Sleuwaegen; Koenraad De Backer; Kristien Coucke; Isabelle Vandenbroere
Archive | 2004
Leo Sleuwaegen; Koenraad De Backer; Kristien Coucke; Isabelle Vandenbroere
Conference proceedings of the 30th EIBA conference | 2004
Koenraad De Backer; Leo Sleuwaegen
Published in <b>2003</b> in Gent by Academia press | 2003
Dominique Vanneste; Filip Abraham; Peter Cabus; Leo Sleuwaegen; Ellen Brock; Koenraad De Backer; Tine De Rijck; Habourdin; Elke Leemans; Enrico Pennings
Archive | 2004
Leo Sleuwaegen; Koenraad De Backer; Kristien Coucke; Isabelle Vandenbroere