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EU accession and foreign-owned firms in Bulgaria

Zadia Feliciano () and Nadia Doytch ()

Post-Communist Economies, 2017, vol. 29, issue 3, 392-404

Abstract: Bulgaria signed the European Union accession treaty in 2005. Accession caused an increase in the volume of inward foreign direct investment flows (IFDI). We analyse World Bank BEEPS firm-level data for 2007 to understand the characteristics and performance of foreign firms in Bulgaria. Regression analysis reveals that foreign firms are larger, have lower capital-to-labour ratios, are more likely to export and are more likely to locate in Sofia. However, foreign firms have had limited success in Bulgaria. They do not exhibit higher sales growth and, in manufacturing, carried out lower capital investment in machinery than domestic firms. The numbers of visits from tax officials is the same for domestic and foreign firms in manufacturing, and lower for foreign firms in the service sector. However, firms with higher exports-to-sales ratios and higher absolute sales were subjected to a higher number of visits from tax officials. These findings suggest that a range of institutional challenges remain for foreign firms in Bulgaria.

Date: 2017
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Working Paper: EU Accession and Foreign Owned Firms in Bulgaria (2016) Downloads
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DOI: 10.1080/14631377.2017.1317425

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