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Archanun Kohpaiboon
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Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Asian Economic Papers 1–34.
Published: 14 February 2025
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This paper examines the impact of digital technology (DT) adoption, defined to encompass both intensity and scale of DT usage on financial performance of small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) using Thailand as a case study during 2018–21, with emphasis on the role of information and communications technology (ICT) and personnel graduated in ICT, and DT depth. The results show that the depth of ICT adoption, firm size, and sectors matters in analyzing the impact of DT on firms’ financial performance. SMEs receive significant benefits when adopting ICT in purchasing goods and services via the Internet, online sales (e-commerce), and online payments. Firms in the services sector tended to gain more benefits from operating through online activities than the manufacturing firms. Software usage generates benefits mostly for the medium and large firms but is of less importance for small firms. Interestingly, access to the Internet, except for e-commerce, has limited impacts on financial performance, even in large firms. The depth of technology, in general, generates greater impact on revenue and price-cost margins than on profit, reflecting the high cost of obtaining advanced technology or diversifying DT usage. The shortage of basic and advanced ICT staff generates concerns about SMEs’ financial performance.
Journal Articles
Publisher: Journals Gateway
Asian Economic Papers (2013) 12 (3): 120–147.
Published: 01 October 2013
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After controlling for the influences of plant-level factor usage and technical characteristics, foreign multinational enterprises (MNEs) used fuel and total energy more efficiently than local manufacturing plants in about one-third of Malaysia's large energy using industries. MNE-local or MNE-private differentials were insignificant, however, in most industries for electricity in Malaysia; total energy, electricity and three fuels (diesel, natural gas, and coal) in Indonesia; and total energy in Thailand. In short, MNEs and local or private plants generally used purchased energy with similar efficiency, probably because they faced similar host country policies and used similar energy technologies.