Skip to main content
Log in

Management turnover, ownership change, and post-bankruptcy failure of small businesses

  • Published:
Small Business Economics Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

We provide the first analysis of management turnover and ownership change as determinants of post-bankruptcy failure of small businesses. Examining micro-level data on Slovenian firms that attempted bankruptcy reorganization and utilizing multiple empirical approaches, we find that changes prior to completed reorganization proceedings never reduce, and in the case of foreign incoming owners or insider incoming managers in fact increase, prospects of firm liquidation. Firm liquidation prospects robustly decrease only with changes that occur after completed proceedings, involve ownership transfer, and feature domestic incoming owners. These results continue to hold under an alternative conceptualization of firm failure. Our findings are consistent with the importance of disruption costs in the process of turning around ailing small businesses. Our analysis casts novel light on the ongoing debate about the consequences of debtor-in-possession rule in bankruptcy and the relevance of successor origin in management turnover and ownership change for firm outcomes.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Institutional subscriptions

Fig. 1
Fig. 2
Fig. 3
Fig. 4

Similar content being viewed by others

Notes

  1. For an overview, see, e.g., Hotchkiss et al. (2008), LoPucki and Doherty (2015) and references therein.

  2. For a more thorough discussion of the SRP, see Cepec and Grajzl (2019).

  3. The legal loophole arose due to the inconsistent criteria for classification of firms in the Companies Act (Zakon o gospodarskih družbah) and the 2013 Insolvency Act (Zakon o finančnem poslovanju, postopkih zaradi insolventnosti in prisilnem prenehanju). As we show in sensitivity analysis, none of our qualitative findings change if we drop the larger business establishment from the sample.

  4. For an overview and insightful discussion, see, e.g., Warren and Westbrook (2009: 610–612), Moulton and Thomas (1993: 129), Altman et al. (2009: 54–55), and Denis and Rodgers (2007: 113–114).

  5. Analogous figures based on the alternative (broader) notion of firm failure are qualitatively very similar and thus omitted.

  6. Management buyouts and instances of ownership transfer where a minority owner would become a majority owner do not occur in our sample. This is not surprising given the small size of businesses under consideration.

  7. Due to very few instances of second change in ownership after completed reorganization proceedings (see Table 1), the corresponding effects could not be reliably estimated.

  8. In their seminal contribution, Barniv et al. (2002: 497) argue that “distinguishing between…post-bankruptcy filing outcomes is more difficult than discriminating between sound and financially distressed firms, which has been extensively studied in prior literature.”

  9. We have verified that other events do not exhibit a robust statistically significant relationship with our measures of firm failure.

  10. Indeed, the application of the Rosenbaum (2002, 2005) bounds test to assess the sensitivity of PSM results after dropping subsets of covariates revealed that the upper bound of p value based on Wilcoxon signed rank test (sig+) did not maintain five-percent significance up to the value of Gamma (a test-specific parameter) equal to five, a rule-of-thumb threshold to judge the reliability of PSM estimates in light possible selection on unobservables (see Cerulli 2015).

  11. King and Nielsen (2019: 15) similarly argue that “PSM is better justified (i.e., still suboptimal but not as much) when very large sample sizes are available.”

  12. Even larger values of δ and Rmax resulted in instability and even absence of computational solutions for the estimated bounds. That is, we have pushed the data to their limit.

References

  • Abadie, A., & Imbens, G. W. (2006). Large sample properties of matching estimators for average treatment effects. Econometrica, 74(1), 235–267.

    Google Scholar 

  • Abadie, A., & Imbens, G. W. (2011). Bias-corrected matching estimators for average treatment effects. Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, 29(1), 1–11.

    Google Scholar 

  • Altman, E. I., & Hotchkiss, E. (2006). Corporate financial distress and bankruptcy: Predict and avoid bankruptcy, analyze and invest in distressed debt (3rd ed.). Hoboken: John Wiley and Sons.

    Google Scholar 

  • Altman, E. I., Kant, T., & Rattanaruengyot, T. (2009). Post-chapter 11 bankruptcy performance: Avoiding chapter 22. Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 21(3), 53–64.

  • Andersen, P. K., Geskus, R. B., de Witte, T., & Putter, H. (2012). Competing risks in epidemiology: Possibilities and pitfalls. International Journal of Epidemiology, 41, 861–870.

    Google Scholar 

  • Arcuri, G. and Levratto N.. 2018. Early stage SME bankruptcy: Does the local banking market matter? Small Business Economics, forthcoming.

  • Balcaen, S., Manigart, S., Buyze, J., & Ooghe, H. (2012). Firm exit after distress: Differentiating between bankruptcy, voluntary liquidation and M&A. Small Business Economics, 39(4), 949–975.

    Google Scholar 

  • Ballinger, G. A., & Marcel, J. J. (2010). The use of an interim CEO during succession episodes and firm performance. Strategic Management Journal, 31(3), 262–283.

    Google Scholar 

  • Barbosa, N., & Louri, H. (2005). Corporate performance: Does ownership matter? A comparison of foreign- and domestic-owned firms in Greece and Portugal. Review of Industrial Organization, 27(1), 73–102.

    Google Scholar 

  • Barniv, R., Agarwal, A., & Leach, R. (2002). Predicting bankruptcy resolution. Journal of Business Finance and Accounting, 29(3–4), 497–520.

    Google Scholar 

  • Bogan, V. L., & Sandler, C. M. (2012). Are firms on the right page with chapter 11? An analysis of firm choices that contribute to post-bankruptcy survival. Applied Economics Letters, 19(7), 609–613.

    Google Scholar 

  • Buehler, S., Kaiser, C., & Jaeger, F. (2012). The geographic determinants of bankruptcy: Evidence from Switzerland. Small Business Economics, 39(1), 231–251.

    Google Scholar 

  • Carter, R., & Van Auken, H. (2006). Small firm bankruptcy. Journal of Small Business Management, 44(4), 493–512.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cepec, J., & Grajzl, P. (2019). Measuring the effectiveness of bankruptcy institutions: Filtering failures in Slovenian financial reorganizations. Journal of Institutional Economics, 15(3), 553–567.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cerulli, G. (2015). Econometric evaluation of socio-economic programs, theory and applications. Berlin: Springer.

    Google Scholar 

  • Chung, C. C., & Beamish, P. W. (2010). The trap of continual ownership change in international equity joint ventures. Organization Science, 21(5), 995–1015.

    Google Scholar 

  • Claessens, S., & Djankov, S. (1999). Enterprise performance and management turnover in the Czech Republic. European Economic Review, 43(4–6), 1115–1124.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cleves, M., Gutierrez, R. G., Gould, W., & Marchenko, Y. V. (2010). An introduction to survival analysis using Stata (3rd ed.). College Station: Stata Press.

    Google Scholar 

  • Collett, N., Pandit, N. R., & Saarikko, J. (2014). Success and failure in turnaround attempts. An analysis of SMEs within the Finnish Restructuring of Enterprises Act. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 26(1–2), 123–141.

    Google Scholar 

  • Cook, G. A. S., Pandit, N. R., & Milman, D. (2012). A resource-based analysis of bankruptcy law, SMEs and corporate recovery. International Small Business Journal, 30(3), 275–293.

    Google Scholar 

  • Couwenberg, O. (2001). Survival rates in bankruptcy systems: Overlooking the evidence. European Journal of Law and Economics, 12(2), 253–273.

    Google Scholar 

  • Dahiya, S., Kose, J., Puri, M., & Ramírez, G. (2003). Debtor-in-possession financing and bankruptcy resolution: Empirical evidence. Journal of Financial Economics, 69(1), 259–280.

    Google Scholar 

  • D'Aveni, R. A., & Ilinitch, A. Y. (1992). Complex patterns of vertical integration in the forest products industry: Systematic and bankruptcy risks. Academy of Management Journal, 35(3), 596–625.

    Google Scholar 

  • Dawley, D. D., Hoffman, J. J., & Lamont, B. T. (2002). Choice situation, refocusing, and post-bankruptcy performance. Journal of Management, 28(5), 695–717.

    Google Scholar 

  • Denis, D. K., & Rodgers, K. J. (2007). Chapter 11: Duration, outcome, and post-reorganization performance. Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 42(1), 101–118.

    Google Scholar 

  • Djankov, S., & Murrell, P. (2002). Enterprise restructuring in transition: A quantitative survey. Journal of Economic Literature, 40(3), 739–792.

    Google Scholar 

  • Estrin, S., Hanousek, J., Kočenda, E., & Svejnar, J. (2009). The effects of privatization and ownership in transition economies. Journal of Economic Literature, 47(3), 699–728.

    Google Scholar 

  • European Commission. 2014. Commission recommendation on a new approach to business failure and insolvency. Commission Staff Working Document, Impact Assessment. Brussels: European Commission.

  • European Law Institute. (2017). Rescue of business in insolvency law. Vienna: European Law Institute.

    Google Scholar 

  • Evans III, J. H., Luo, S., & Nagarajan, N. J. (2014). CEO turnover, financial distress, and contractual innovations. Accounting Review, 89(3), 959–990.

    Google Scholar 

  • Fattah, L.A., Barthélémy S., Levratto N, and Trempont B.. 2016. Post reorganization survival: A semi-parametric and non-parametric analysis of firm characteristics. EconomiX Working Paper 2016–22.

  • Furtado, E. P. H., & Karan, V. (1990). Causes, consequences, and shareholder wealth effects of management turnover: A review of the empirical evidence. Financial Management, 19(2), 60–75.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gerber Perlman, F. (Ed.). (2012). Debtor-in-possession financing: Funding a chapter 11 case. Alexandria: American Bankruptcy Institute.

    Google Scholar 

  • Gilson, S. C. (1990). Bankruptcy, boards, banks, and blockholders: Evidence on changes in corporate ownership and control when firms default. Journal of Financial Economics, 27(2), 355–387.

    Google Scholar 

  • Grusky, O. (1960). Administrative succession in formal organizations. Social Forces, 39(2), 105–115.

    Google Scholar 

  • Guadalupe, M., Kuzmina, O., & Thomas, C. (2012). Innovation and foreign ownership. American Economic Review, 102(7), 3594–3627.

    Google Scholar 

  • Guest, R. H. (1962). Managerial succession in complex organizations. American Journal of Sociology, 68(1), 47–56.

    Google Scholar 

  • Habis, H., & Herings, P. J. J. (2013). Stochastic bankruptcy games. International Journal of Game Theory, 42(4), 973–988.

    Google Scholar 

  • Harhoff, D., Stahl, K., & Woywode, M. (1998). Legal form, growth and exit of west German firms-empirical results for manufacturing, construction, trade and service industries. Journal of Industrial Economics, 46(4), 453–488.

    Google Scholar 

  • Harris, R., & Robinson, C. (2002). The effect of foreign acquisitions on total factor productivity: Plant-level evidence from U.K. manufacturing, 1987-1992. Review of Economics and Statistics, 84(3), 562–568.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hart, O. (2006). Different approaches to bankruptcy. CESifo DICE Report, Journal for Institutional Comparisons, 4(1), 3–8.

    Google Scholar 

  • Haveman, H. A., Russo, M. V., & Meyer, A. D. (2001). Organizational environments in flux: The impact of regulatory punctuations on organizational domains, CEO succession, and performance. Organization Science, 12(3), 253–273.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hotchkiss, E. S. (1995). Postbankruptcy performance and management turnover. Journal of Finance, 50(1), 3–21.

    Google Scholar 

  • Hotchkiss, E. S., John, K., Mooradian, R. M., & Thorburn, K. S. (2008). Bankruptcy and the resolution of financial distress. In B. E. Eckbo (Ed.), Handbook of empirical corporate finance (Vol. 2, pp. 235–287). Amsterdam: Elsevier B.V..

    Google Scholar 

  • Huson, M. R., & Parrino, R. (2010). The effects of management turnover on firm performance. In H. K. Baker & R. Anderson (Eds.), Corporate governance: A synthesis of theory, research, and practice (pp. 323–344). Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons.

    Google Scholar 

  • Jirjahn, U., & Mueller, S. (2014). Non-union worker representation, foreign owners, and the performance of establishments. Oxford Economic Papers, 66(1), 140–163.

    Google Scholar 

  • Karaevli, A. (2007). Performance consequences of new CEO ‘outsiderness’: Moderating effects of pre and post-succession contexts. Strategic Management Journal, 28(7), 681–706.

    Google Scholar 

  • Khanna, N., & Poulsen, A. B. (1995). Managers of financially distressed firms: Villains or scapegoats? Journal of Finance, 50(3), 919–940.

    Google Scholar 

  • King, G., & Nielsen, R. (2019). Why propensity scores should not be used for matching. Forthcoming in Political Analysis. https://doi.org/10.1017/pan.2019.11.

  • Krug, J. A., & Nigh, D. (2001). Executive perceptions in foreign and domestic acquisitions: An analysis of foreign ownership and its effect on executive fate. Journal of World Business, 36(1), 85–105.

    Google Scholar 

  • Kwak, B., Mo, K., & Yoon, N. (2016). Manager retention and post-bankruptcy performance: Evidence from South Korea. Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 52(11), 2530–2545.

    Google Scholar 

  • Laitinen, E. K. (2011). Assessing viability of Finnish reorganization and bankruptcy firms. European Journal of Law and Economics, 31(2), 167–198.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lee, S.-H., Yamakawa, Y., Peng, M. W., & Barney, J. B. (2011). How do bankruptcy laws affect entrepreneurship development around the world? Journal of Business Venturing, 26(5), 505–520.

    Google Scholar 

  • Leyman, B. (2012). The uneasy case for rehabilitating small firms under the 1997-reorganization law in Belgium: Evidence from reorganization plans. European Journal of Law and Economics, 34(3), 533–560.

    Google Scholar 

  • Leyman, B., Schoors, K. J. L., & Coussement, P. (2011). Does court-supervised reorganization work? Evidence from post-confirmation firm failure. International Review of Law and Economics, 31(3), 149–168.

    Google Scholar 

  • LoPucki, L. M., & Doherty, J. W. (2015). Bankruptcy survival. UCLA Law Review, 62(4), 970–1015.

    Google Scholar 

  • Lussier, R. N., & Halabi, C. E. (2010). A three-country comparison of the business success versus failure prediction model. Journal of Small Business Management, 48(3), 360–377.

    Google Scholar 

  • McGuckin, R. H., & Nguyen, S. V. (1995). On productivity and plant ownership change: New evidence from the longitudinal research database. RAND Journal of Economics, 26(2), 257–276.

    Google Scholar 

  • Moulton, W. N., & Thomas, H. (1993). Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence. Strategic Management Journal, 14(2), 125–135.

    Google Scholar 

  • Noordzij, M., Leffondre, K., van Stralen, K. J., Zoccali, C., Dekker, F. W., & Jager, K. J. (2013). When do we need competing risks methods for survival analysis in nephrology? Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, 28, 2670–2677.

    Google Scholar 

  • Nooteboom, B. (1994). Innovation and diffusion in small firms: Theory and evidence. Small Business Economics, 6(5), 327–347.

    Google Scholar 

  • Ogane, Y. (2016). Banking relationship numbers and new business bankruptcies. Small Business Economics, 46(2), 169–185.

    Google Scholar 

  • Ogane, Y. (2019). Effects of main bank switching on new business bankruptcy. Applied Economics, forthcoming. https://doi.org/10.1080/00036846.2019.1616067.

  • Oster, E. (2019). Unobservable selection and coefficient stability: Theory and evidence. Journal of Business and Economic Statistics, 37(2), 187–204.

    Google Scholar 

  • Petrovsky, N., James, O., & Boyne, G. A. (2015). New leaders’ managerial background and the performance of public organizations: The theory of publicness fit. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 25(1), 217–236.

    Google Scholar 

  • Platt, H. D., & Platt, M. B. (2002). A re–examination of the effectiveness of the bankruptcy process. Journal of Business Finance and Accounting, 29(9–10), 1209–1237.

    Google Scholar 

  • Pompe, P. P. M., & Bilderbeek, J. (2005). The prediction of bankruptcy of small- and medium-sized industrial firms. Journal of Business Venturing, 20(6), 847–868.

    Google Scholar 

  • Rosenbaum, P. R. (2002). Observational studies. New York: Springer.

    Google Scholar 

  • Rosenbaum, P. R. (2005). Sensitivity analysis in observational studies. In B. S. Everitt & D. C. Howell (Eds.), Encyclopedia of statistics in behavioral science (pp. 1809–1814). Chichester: Wiley.

    Google Scholar 

  • Schepker, D. J., Kim, Y., Patel, P. C., Thatcher, S. M. B., & Campion, M. C. (2017). CEO succession, strategic change, and post-succession performance: A meta-analysis. The Leadership Quarterly, 28(6), 701–720.

    Google Scholar 

  • Shimizu, K. (2012). Bankruptcies of small firms and lending relationship. Journal of Banking and Finance, 36(3), 857–870.

    Google Scholar 

  • Skeel, D. A. (2004). The past, present and future of debtor-in-possession financing. Cardozo Law Review, 25(5), 1905–1934.

    Google Scholar 

  • Sundgren, S. (1998). Does a reorganization law improve the efficiency of the insolvency law? The Finnish experience. European Journal of Law and Economics, 6(2), 177–198.

    Google Scholar 

  • Tyson, L. d.’ A., Petrin, T., & Rogers, H. (1994). Promoting entrepreneurship in Eastern Europe. Small Business Economics, 6(3), 165–184.

    Google Scholar 

  • Warren, E., & Westbrook, J. L. (2009). The success of chapter 11: A challenge to the critics. Michigan Law Review, 107(4), 603–642.

    Google Scholar 

  • White, M. J. (1989). The corporate bankruptcy decision. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 3(2), 129–151.

    Google Scholar 

  • White, M. J. (2016). Small business bankruptcy. Annual Review of Financial Economics, 8, 317–336.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wilson, N., Ochotnický, P., & Káčer, M. (2016). Creation and destruction in transition economies: The SME sector in Slovakia. International Small Business Journal, 34(5), 579–600.

    Google Scholar 

  • Wright, M., Pruthi, S., & Lockett, A. (2005). International venture capital research: From cross-country comparisons to crossing borders. International Journal of Management Reviews, 7(3), 135–165.

    Google Scholar 

  • Zaheer, S. (1995). Overcoming the liability of foreignness. Academy of Management Journal, 38(2), 341–363.

    Google Scholar 

  • Zhao, Z. (2004). Using matching to estimate treatment effects: Data requirements, matching metrics, and Monte Carlo evidence. Review of Economics and Statistics, 86(1), 91–107.

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Marc Junkunc and two anonymous reviewers for helpful comments and suggestions. This project was conceived during Jaka Cepec’s Fulbright visit at the Washington and Lee University (W&L) School of Law. We thank the faculty and staff of W&L School of Law for their hospitality.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Peter Grajzl.

Additional information

Publisher’s note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

* The datasets generated and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Appendix

Appendix

Fig. 5
figure 5

Covariate balance before and after matching

Table 8 Variable definitions, focal explanatory variables
Table 9 Variable definitions, time-invariant control variables
Table 10 OLS-LPM estimates, alternative notion of firm failure

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Cepec, J., Grajzl, P. Management turnover, ownership change, and post-bankruptcy failure of small businesses. Small Bus Econ 57, 555–581 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-020-00325-z

Download citation

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-020-00325-z

Keywords

JEL classifications

Navigation