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Understanding the connection between SMEs’ competitiveness and cash flow generation: an empirical analysis from Hungary

Gabor Markus (Department of Finance and Accounting, Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Pécs, Pécs, Hungary)
Andras Rideg (Department of Management Science, Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Pécs, Pécs, Hungary)

Competitiveness Review

ISSN: 1059-5422

Article publication date: 12 October 2020

Issue publication date: 21 May 2021

538

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to interconnect the firm level competitive performance (competitiveness) to the financial performance of the firms. The goal is to give evidence on how successful small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) use their financial performance to support their competitive performance.

Design/methodology/approach

Competitiveness is interpreted and measured through the resource-based view theory on a wide range of competitiveness measurements with a sample size of 639 SMEs. Financial data originate from official, publicly accessible governmental archives. All data are from a mid-size Central European country (Hungary). To interconnect competitiveness and financial performance, this paper recognizes two types of cash flow, namely, cash flow to the “past” (dividend and debt service) and cash flow to the “future” (CAPEX and innovation). This paper used ordinary least squares regression and binomial logistic regression to analyze connections.

Findings

Cash flows to the “future” have much stronger effects on competitiveness than cash flows to the “past.” Debt services do not affect competitiveness, whereas dividends, CAPEX and innovation efforts have a significant positive connection to competitiveness, showing that higher cash flow indicates higher competitive performance. If this paper knows how much the firm spends on innovation and dividends, in about the four-fifths of the cases, this paper can predict the level of the competitiveness of the firm without any additional information. The level of these variables gives enough information, the variability of them is not relevant.

Research limitations/implications

The explanatory power of future-oriented cash flow elements is much higher than that of the past-oriented ones, while innovation dominates all models. Firms with higher competitiveness build their returns in their cost structure, and only when the financial position of the firm is stable enough, withdraw the financial resource based on a long-term plan. The results are limited by the fact that using the current sample, detailed and representative (e.g. cross-industrial, spatial, etc.) decomposition is not possible.

Originality/value

Literature is focusing on how SMEs reach success, how SMEs “earn money.” There is no evidence on how SMEs “spend money,” earned during their success.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

“The research was financed by the Higher Education Institutional Excellence Programme of the Ministry for Innovation and Technology in Hungary, within the framework of the 4th thematic programme ‘Enhancing the Role of Domestic Companies in the Reindustrialization of Hungary” of the University of Pécs.’

This publication/research was supported by the European Union and Hungary and co-financed by the European Social Fund through the project EFOP-3.6.2-16-2017-00017, titled “Sustainable, intelligent and inclusive regional and city models”.

Citation

Markus, G. and Rideg, A. (2021), "Understanding the connection between SMEs’ competitiveness and cash flow generation: an empirical analysis from Hungary", Competitiveness Review, Vol. 31 No. 3, pp. 397-419. https://doi.org/10.1108/CR-01-2020-0019

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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