Barriers to Financial Innovation—Corporate Finance Perspective
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- RQ 1:
- What are the main types of barriers to financial innovations in the opinion of the financial managers?
- RQ 2:
- Is there a link between the dominant type of barriers pointed to by the managers and the firm characteristics (size, age, organization structure, range of activity)?
- RQ 3:
- What are the main types of barriers to financial innovations in the opinion of experts?
- RQ 4:
- Which factors may stimulate the application of financial innovations in the opinion of experts?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Financial Innovation as a Special Type of Innovation
2.2. Application of Financial Innovations in the Corporate Financial Strategy
2.3. Barriers to Financial Innovations Implementation in the Corporate Financial Strategy
- financial barriers (e.g., high costs of innovative activity, lack of sources of financing, transaction costs and fees),
- knowledge barriers (e.g., lack of knowledge on financial innovation, lack of qualified employees),
- market barriers (e.g., lack of information on the market offer of financial innovation, lack of matching offer),
- institutional regulations (e.g., tax and accounting regulations),
- psychological factors (e.g., lack of need to create innovations, negative attitude toward innovative processes).
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Research Design
3.2. Structure of the Research Sample
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Types of the Applied Financial Innovations
4.2. The Main Types of Barriers to Financial Innovations—Firms’ Perspective
4.3. The Main Types of Barriers to Financial Innovations—Experts’ Opinion
- (1)
- lack of proper sources of information, as well as lack of an adequate promotional campaign on financial innovations, leads to a knowledge gap on the potential application of financial innovation, which results in limited trust related to the reluctance of firms to use unknown solutions;
- (2)
- unclear legal regulations are connected with the fear of the negative consequences, resulting from the application of financial innovations, which combined with the reluctance to take risks, results in a preference for well-known, traditional solutions.
5. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
List 5 financial motives for the application of financial innovations in your company |
List 5 non-financial motives for the application of financial innovations in your company |
List 5 main effects of the application of financial innovations in your company |
What are the effects of the application of financial innovations in your company (past experience)?
|
Are you planning to use financial innovations in your company in future (future plans)?
|
Indicate the types of financial innovations applied in your company (now or/and in the past):
|
Indicate 6 the most important barriers to the application of financial innovations in your company:
|
Part I | Very low | Low | Moderate | High | Very high |
In your opinion what is the level of knowledge about financial innovations in Polish firms? | |||||
In your opinion what is the level of interest in financial innovations in Polish firms? | |||||
In your opinion what is the level of access to financial innovations by Polish firms? | |||||
In your opinion what is the level of application of financial innovations in Polish firms:
| |||||
In your opinion what is the level of access to financial innovations by Polish firms?
| |||||
In your opinion what is the relative importance (strength) of the factors stimulating the application of financial innovations in Polish firms?
| |||||
Part II | |||||
List 3 crucial factors hampering the effective application of financial innovations by Polish firms |
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Characteristics | Description | Subcategories |
---|---|---|
Size (SE) | Number of employees | Small—SE_SM—up till 250 |
Large—SE_L—200–2500 | ||
Very large—SE_VL—above 2500 | ||
Size (SR) | Total revenues (in PLN million) | Small—SR_SM—up till 200 |
Large—SR_L—200–500 | ||
Very large—SR_VL—above 500 | ||
Age (AG) | Number of years since inception | Young—AG_Y—up till 5 years of operation |
Medium-aged—AG_G—5–15 years of operation | ||
Mature—AG_M—above 15 years of operation | ||
Organization structure (OS) | Form of organization structure | OS_IB—independent business organization |
OS_PG—part of national capital group | ||
OS_IG—part of international capital group | ||
Range of activity (RA) | Market of operations | RA_DM—only domestic market |
RA_IM—international market |
Size (Employment) | Size (Revenues) | Age | Organization Structure | Range of Activity | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SE_SM | 59% | SR_SM | 57% | AG_Y | 17% | OS_IB | 47% | RA_DM | 41% |
SE_L | 27% | SR_L | 13% | AG_G | 36% | OS_PG | 32% | RA_IM | 59% |
SE_VL | 14% | SR_VL | 30% | AG_M | 47% | OS_IG | 21% |
Firm Characteristics | SE | SR | AG | OS | RA |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
R_EXB | 0.178 ** | 0.230 * | −0.004 | 0.162 | 0.117 |
Firm Characteristics | R_EXB |
---|---|
SE | 4.121; p-value 0.127 |
SR | 6.812; p-value 0.033 ** |
AG | 0.12; p-value 0.942 |
OS | 6.071; p-value 0.047 ** |
RA | 1.733; p-value 0.188 |
Endogenous Factors (ENB) | Exogenous Factors (EXB) |
---|---|
Organization barriers lack of sufficient knowledge in firms about the possibilities of applying financial innovations lack of professional staff with adequate skills and knowledge of the current market offer of the financial products and services available in the financial system | Market barriers the complex construction of financial innovation difficult access to new financial services and products due to the requirements imposed on customers of financial institutions lack of good sources of information on the market offer lack of appropriate advertising from the suppliers (creators) of financial innovation mismatch of the market offer of the new financial products and services to the specificity and needs of the firms lack of competent experts, employees of financial institutions supporting companies in the selection of appropriate financial innovations |
Psychological barriers reluctance to introduce innovation coupled with the habit and convenience of using traditional financial solutions lack of trust in the financial institutions offering innovations (both traditional and new financial service providers) fear of the risk resulting from the application of financial innovations reluctance to change | Legal barriers unclear and complicated legal regulations related to financial innovation (in this: Tax and accounting regulations) |
Financial barriers high transaction costs and fees associated with the application of financial innovations |
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Błach, J. Barriers to Financial Innovation—Corporate Finance Perspective. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2020, 13, 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13110273
Błach J. Barriers to Financial Innovation—Corporate Finance Perspective. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2020; 13(11):273. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13110273
Chicago/Turabian StyleBłach, Joanna. 2020. "Barriers to Financial Innovation—Corporate Finance Perspective" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 13, no. 11: 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13110273
APA StyleBłach, J. (2020). Barriers to Financial Innovation—Corporate Finance Perspective. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 13(11), 273. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm13110273