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Weathering the Storm: The performance of the largest industrial firms in Greece during the Great Depression

Konstantinos Aivalis, Ioanna Sapfo Pepelasis and Stefanos Zarkos
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Konstantinos Aivalis: Athens University of Economics and Business
Ioanna Sapfo Pepelasis: Athens University of Economics and Business
Stefanos Zarkos: Athens University of Economics and Business

No 201504, Working Papers from Athens University Of Economics and Business, Department of Economics

Abstract: On the basis of a new data set constructed from company balance sheets and profit and loss accounts, this paper examines the performance of the top 50 industrial joint stock companies in Greece which survived the Great Depression. This is the first analysis ever of the financial accounts of big business in Greek industry during this historical period. First- ly, we examine through descriptive statistics the trends in basic indicators (and ratios for assets, profits, leverage, liquidity, solvency, and efficiency) during the decade 1927-1936. Secondly, on the basis of panel data analysis we test for differences before (1927-1929), during (1930-1933) and after (1934-1936) the crisis and search for those financial characte- ristics that allowed certain firms within our survivor survivor cohort to perform better than others during the period under review. The main findings are that: 1) The Great Depression had a rather mild impact on the performance of big business in industry. 2) The level of leverage throughout the period was lower than the one anticipated in other economies and prescribed in theory. For our cohort followed from the beginning a leverage policy which was “as if they were” in a crisis situation. Also, l everage (financial or operating) did not produce the expected the expected benefits (i.e. higher capital investment) even at periods of increasing industrial profits as in the post crisis period. 3) The best performers had high liquidity and made prompt interest payments. In the last analysis, there was not a reversal in profitability for big busi- ness, but the sliding down into labour intensive practices, something enhanced by the import sub- stitution environment cultivated at a time of effective de-globalization.

Keywords: Greece; big industry; joint stock companies; survivors; financial statements; business performance; leverage; panel data analysis. (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C23 G01 M41 N64 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 35 pages
Date: 2015-04
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