01602nas a2200169 4500008004100000245010200041210006900143260000900212300000900221490000700230520098700237653001201224653001701236100002501253700001801278856013601296 2006 eng d00aCan Institutional Change Impact High-Technology Firm Growth: Evidence from Germany's Neuer Markt0 aCan Institutional Change Impact HighTechnology Firm Growth Evide c2006 a9-230 v253 aTo facilitate the transformation of the German economy from the traditional manufacturing industries towards emerging new technologies, a new segment of the Frankfurt exchange was introduced in 1997 — the Neuer Markt. To examine whether the Neuer Markt was successful, we compare the relationship between firm size and growth for firms listed on the Neuer Markt and contrast the results with two benchmarks: (1) for German firms prior to the 1990s (to reflect the older traditional manufacturing sector) and (2) for the stylized results for the US. This study provides evidence that not only did many new firms obtain funding from the Neuer Markt; but that for the first time in recent history, Germany succeeded in enabling smaller firms to grow faster than larger firms. This suggests that the new policies were not only successful in promoting a new type of firm that otherwise might not exist, but in transforming the sources of growth and innovation within the German economy.10aFinance10aOSU-Cascades1 aAudretsch, David, B.1 aElston, Julie u/biblio/can-institutional-change-impact-high-technology-firm-growth-evidence-germanys-neuer-markt-001309nas a2200169 4500008004100000245011400041210006900155260000900224300000900233490000700242520068700249653001200936653001700948100002500965700001800990856013101008 2001 eng d00aDoes firm size matter? Evidence on the impact of liquidity constraints on firm investment behavior in Germany0 aDoes firm size matter Evidence on the impact of liquidity constr c2001 a1-170 v203 aThis paper examines the link between liquidity constraints and investment behavior for German firms of different sizes from 1970 to 1986. Results indicate that medium sized firms appear to be more liquidity constrained in their investment behavior than either the smallest or largest firms in the study, suggesting that the unique German infrastructure designed to assist the small firm has indeed succeeded in alleviating, to some degree, such liquidity constraints. Findings also support the hypothesis that the emerging competition and internationalism which characterized the German financial markets in the 1980s, have been improving access to capital for some groups of firms.10aFinance10aOSU-Cascades1 aAudretsch, David, B.1 aElston, Julie u/biblio/does-firm-size-matter-evidence-impact-liquidity-constraints-firm-investment-behavior-0