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Dive into the research topics where Marion Dovis is active.

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Featured researches published by Marion Dovis.


Canadian Journal of Economics | 2013

Imports and TFP at the Firm Level: The Role of Absorptive Capacity §

Patricia Augier; Olivier Cadot; Marion Dovis

This paper estimates the effect of the decision to import intermediate goods and capital equipment on Total Factor Productivity (TFP) at the firm level on a panel of Spanish firms (19912002). We use two alternative approaches. In the first, we estimate TFP and apply a diffindiff estimator with a control group constructed by propensityscore matching. In the second, direct method, we estimate TFP with imported inputs as a state variable in one stage. Both approaches show that the effect of a firms decision to source intermediates and capital equipment abroad on its TFP depends critically on its capacity to absorb technology, measured by the proportion of skilled labour.


Economics of Transition | 2012

The Business Environment and Moroccan Firm Productivity

Patricia Augier; Marion Dovis; Michael Gasiorek

The paper focuses on the role of the business environment in understanding differences in the total factor productivity of Moroccan firms. The business environment is captured by measures which include the investment climate in which firms operate, i.e. access to credit, regulatory and institutional environment and infrastructure. The evidence on the relationship between credit and productivity is strongly indicative of credit resources misallocation in Morocco. We also find that, heavier bureaucracy and differences in regulations appear to have a negative effect on firm productivity. This last result is particularly relevant for small firms, and/or those that do not export and/or those with no access to foreign capital.


Asia Pacific Business Review | 2015

Do Japanese MNCs Use Expatriates to Contain Risk in Asian Host Countries

Jean-Pascal Bassino; Marion Dovis; Pierre van der Eng

We investigate the impact of host-country risk on the expatriation strategies of multinational firms, using data on Japanese subsidiary firms in manufacturing industries in 13 host countries in Asia. We find that country risk is negatively correlated with the degree of expatriation and that, rather than host-country risk, firm-specific factors (particularly capital intensity, ownership share of parent firms in subsidiaries and the age of the venture) explain most of the variation in the degree to which subsidiaries rely on Japanese expatriates. Contrary to previous studies, the capital intensity of production is a key explanatory firm-specific variable that correlates positively with the degree of expatriation. Japanese multinational companies do not rely on expatria127=tes to off-set host-country risk, but to mitigate risk to parent investment in subsidiaries.


Journal of International Trade & Economic Development | 2013

Does export-market participation improve productivity? Evidence from Spanish manufacturing firms

Patricia Augier; Marion Dovis

This article has a dual aim. First, it sets out to underline a learning-by-exporting effect in Spanish firms between 1991 and 2002. It further seeks to outline the conditions allowing firms to benefit from these spillover effects. Using a propensity score matching method, a group of firms having entered the export market (treatment group) is compared with a similar group of non-exporting firms (control group), and difference-in-differences regressions are carried out. The results show a cumulative productivity differential of 32% for the first four years of exporting, with continuous improvement in productivity. After three years of exporting, productivity gain is still approximately 10%. This study shows that increases in capacity utilisation and competitive pressure from foreign markets are insufficient to explain this causal link between exporting and total factor productivity (TFP). It is thus possible to deduce the presence of a learning-by-exporting effect, benefiting firms with sufficiently qualified employees and which are already engaged in international relations (due to foreign suppliers and/or foreign equity participation).


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2015

Biological Well-Being in Late 19th Century Philippines

Jean-Pascal Bassino; Marion Dovis; John Komlos


Cliometrica | 2018

Biological well-being in late nineteenth-century Philippines

Jean-Pascal Bassino; Marion Dovis; John Komlos


International Economics | 2017

Productivity and Wage Premiums: Evidence from Vietnamese Ordinary and Processing Exporters

Mai T.P. Vu; Flora Bellone; Marion Dovis


Oxford Development Studies | 2016

Better Access to Water, Better Children's Health: A Mirage?

Patricia Augier; Marion Dovis; Charles Lai-Tong


Archive | 2016

Regulatory harmonization, profits, and productivity: Firm-level evidence from Morocco

Patricia Augier; Olivier Cadot; Marion Dovis


Post-Print | 2015

Do Japanese MNCs use expatriates to contain risk in Asian host countries

Jean-Pascal Bassino; Marion Dovis; Pierre Eng

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Jean-Pascal Bassino

École normale supérieure de Lyon

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Pierre van der Eng

Australian National University

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Mai T.P. Vu

Foreign Trade University

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Flora Bellone

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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