Brexit and the fintech revolution in Europe: lessons from the Bulgarian digital finance sector

IF 2.9 Q2 BUSINESS Competitiveness Review Pub Date : 2024-07-04 DOI:10.1108/cr-07-2022-0108
Deyan Radev, Georgi Penev
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Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to investigate the drivers of the resilience of the fintech sector in emerging Europe (EU) by analyzing the performance of 128 Bulgarian fintech companies in the period around the Referendum for Brexit in 2016. The Referendum was followed by a rapid growth of the Bulgarian fintech sector at a moment when venture capital funding was limited, which challenged firms to improve their fundamentals.

Design/methodology/approach

This empirical paper uses descriptive and panel data analysis based on the firm balance sheet and income statement data at the annual level.

Findings

The results show that larger and better-capitalized firms, which outsource their non-core activities and focus on their main competitive strengths, tend to have higher operating income and profit. The authors also find positive real-economy effects as these companies hire more actively to maintain growth. The results are primarily driven by the post-Brexit period of 2016–2019 when the authors find a tighter link between performance and firm fundamentals. These results have important managerial and policy implications and provide interesting directions for future research.

Practical implications

The findings have important management and policy implications. The authors argue that the flexibility of the Bulgarian fintech cluster, including the practice of Bulgarian fintech startups to outsource non-core activities; the readiness of universities to open new master programs to address firm demand for skilled labor and the startup-friendly environment in the main cluster hotspot, Sofia, has contributed to the resilience of the sector and can explain the drivers behind our findings. Fintech firms are very efficient in utilizing external services to foster their performance and growth, which may suggest that public policies that provide financial support for cloud services and outsourcing for startups during downturns or crises may improve economic growth and may have positive externalities for the supporting sectors that provide these services.

Originality/value

This paper fulfills an identified need to study the drivers of Fintech performance to identify best practices for managerial actions during economic or political crises, as well as government policy recommendations. To the best of the authors knowledge, this is one of the first empirical academic studies that examine the impact of Brexit on the European Fintech sector and real economy. The identified managerial strategies for ensuring regional resilience to economic crises and political shocks can be applied in various settings within and outside the EU.

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英国脱欧与欧洲金融科技革命:保加利亚数字金融业的经验教训
目的本文旨在通过分析128家保加利亚金融科技公司在2016年英国脱欧公投前后的表现,研究新兴欧洲(欧盟)金融科技行业恢复力的驱动因素。公投之后,保加利亚金融科技行业迅速发展,而此时风险投资资金有限,这对企业改善基本面提出了挑战。研究结果研究结果表明,规模较大、资本实力较强的企业将非核心业务外包,专注于自身的主要竞争优势,往往拥有较高的营业收入和利润。作者还发现,由于这些公司更积极地雇佣员工以保持增长,因此对实体经济产生了积极影响。这些结果主要受英国脱欧后的 2016-2019 年期间的影响,作者发现这一时期的业绩与公司基本面之间的联系更加紧密。这些结果具有重要的管理和政策意义,并为未来研究提供了有趣的方向。作者认为,保加利亚金融科技集群的灵活性,包括保加利亚金融科技初创企业外包非核心业务的做法;大学为满足企业对熟练劳动力的需求而开设新硕士课程的意愿;以及集群主要热点城市索菲亚对初创企业友好的环境,都有助于提高该行业的弹性,并能解释我们的研究结果背后的驱动因素。金融科技公司在利用外部服务促进其业绩和增长方面非常高效,这可能表明,在经济衰退或危机期间为云服务和初创企业外包提供财政支持的公共政策可能会改善经济增长,并可能为提供这些服务的支持部门带来积极的外部效应。 本文满足了研究金融科技业绩驱动因素以确定经济或政治危机期间管理行动的最佳实践以及政府政策建议的明确需求。据作者所知,这是研究英国脱欧对欧洲金融科技行业和实体经济影响的首批实证性学术研究之一。所确定的确保地区抵御经济危机和政治冲击的管理策略可适用于欧盟内外的各种环境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
17.20%
发文量
50
期刊介绍: The following list indicates the key issues in the Competitiveness Review. We invite papers on these and related topics. Special issues of the Review will collect papers on specific topics selected by the editors. Definition/conceptual framework of competitiveness Competitiveness diagnostics and rankings Competitiveness and economic outcomes Specific dimensions of competitiveness Competitiveness and endowments Competitiveness and economic development Location and business strategy International business and the role of MNCs Innovation and innovative capacity Clusters and cluster initiatives Institutions for competitiveness Public policy (e.g., innovation, cluster development, regional development) The Competitiveness Review aims to publish high quality papers directed at scholars, government institutions, businesses and practitioners. It appears in collaboration with key academic and professional groups in the field of competitiveness analysis and policy, including the Microeconomics of Competitiveness (MOC) network and The Competitiveness Institute (TCI) practitioner network for competitiveness, clusters and innovation.
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