The effect of government support on Bureaucracy, COVID-19 resilience and export intensity: Evidence from North Africa.

Adah-Kole Emmanuel Onjewu, Femi Olan, Richard Benon-Be-Isan Nyuur, Salima Paul, Ha Thanh Truc Nguyen
Author Information
  1. Adah-Kole Emmanuel Onjewu: Newcastle Business School, Northumbria University, Newcastle Upon Tyne NE1 8ST, UK.
  2. Femi Olan: Essex Business School, University of Essex, Southend-on-Sea SS1 1LW, UK.
  3. Richard Benon-Be-Isan Nyuur: School of Management, University of Bradford, West Yorkshire BD7 1DP, UK.
  4. Salima Paul: Plymouth Business School, University of Plymouth, Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK.
  5. Ha Thanh Truc Nguyen: Kent Business School, University of Kent, Kent ME4 4TE, UK.

Abstract

The literature on the imperativeness of government support for firm survival since the onset of COVID-19 is vast, but scholars have scarcely considered the impact of such assistance on managers' time, nor the extent to which support measures induce resilience and export activity. Accordingly, this study assesses the impact of government support on (1) bureaucracy and (2) resilience using data from 535 Moroccan SMEs. It further evaluates the influence of resilience on direct versus indirect exports, and espouses the institutional voids, resource-based and strategy-creation view to explain the associations through a contingency lens. The results demonstrate that (1) government support increases bureaucracy which, (2) surprisingly triggers and enhances resilience. Furthermore, (3) resilience has a positive impact on direct exports but (4) adversely affects indirect exports. Theoretically, the findings acquiesce extant calls for measurement specificity in export performance. Practically, stakeholders' attention is drawn to the value of managers' time well spent.

Keywords

References

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Word Cloud

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