Doğan, Ergun
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Dogan, Ergun
Job Title
Prof. Dr.
Email Address
ergundogan@cankaya.edu.tr
Main Affiliation
İktisat
Status
Current Staff
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Scopus Author ID
Turkish CoHE Profile ID
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WoS Researcher ID
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Sustainable Development Goals
1NO POVERTY
0
Research Products
2ZERO HUNGER
1
Research Products
3GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING
0
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4QUALITY EDUCATION
0
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5GENDER EQUALITY
0
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6CLEAN WATER AND SANITATION
0
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7AFFORDABLE AND CLEAN ENERGY
0
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8DECENT WORK AND ECONOMIC GROWTH
7
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9INDUSTRY, INNOVATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE
5
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10REDUCED INEQUALITIES
1
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11SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND COMMUNITIES
0
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12RESPONSIBLE CONSUMPTION AND PRODUCTION
0
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13CLIMATE ACTION
0
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14LIFE BELOW WATER
0
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15LIFE ON LAND
0
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16PEACE, JUSTICE AND STRONG INSTITUTIONS
0
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17PARTNERSHIPS FOR THE GOALS
3
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Documents
12
Citations
110
h-index
7

Documents
9
Citations
60
No records found in other affiliations.

Scholarly Output
10
Articles
10
Views / Downloads
209/115
Supervised MSc Theses
0
Supervised PhD Theses
0
WoS Citation Count
58
Scopus Citation Count
76
Patents
0
Projects
0
WoS Citations per Publication
5.80
Scopus Citations per Publication
7.60
Open Access Source
6
Supervised Theses
0
| Journal | Count |
|---|---|
| Asian Economic Papers | 2 |
| Economic Modelling | 1 |
| Economic Research-Ekonomska Istraživanja | 1 |
| Journal of International Commerce, Economics and Policy | 1 |
| Journal of International Development | 1 |
Current Page: 1 / 2
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10 results
Scholarly Output Search Results
Now showing 1 - 10 of 10
Article Citation - WoS: 4Citation - Scopus: 9Turnover, Ownership and Productivity in Malaysian Manufacturing(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2013) Dogan, Ergun; Wong, Koi Nyen; Yap, Michael M. C.Applying Foster, Haltiwanger, and Krizan's decomposition of productivity growth method to Malaysian manufacturing census data for 2000 and 2005, we analyze if firm turnover by ownership (domestic vs. foreign) has any impact on the sector's aggregate productivity growth. The findings show that turnover matters regardless of ownership, but more importantly, attracting foreign direct investment inflows could induce positive net entry effect'. The analysis shows that large-sized foreign and domestic entrants are more productive than medium-sized and especially small-sized ones. The study provides important implications for government policies based on ownership and firm size.Article Citation - WoS: 15Citation - Scopus: 14A Nonparametric Panel Data Model for Examining the Contribution of Tourism To Economic Growth(Elsevier, 2023) Zhang, Xibin; Dogan, ErgunWe apply a nonparametric panel data model with cross-sectional and time-varying coefficients to examine the relationship between tourist arrivals and economic growth in the Schengen area from 1995 to 2019. In contrast to the parametric models employed in other studies, our nonparametric model makes no assumption about functional form and, hence, allows us to model the relationship nonlinearly. We find that the tourism-economic growth relationship in the Schengen area is nonlinear and time-varying. While the relationship between tourism and economic growth was positive and significant during 1995-2003, it was negative and significant during the Global Financial Crisis (2007-2008) and the European recession of 2012-2013. One additional contribution of the study is the finding that total factor productivity (TFP) has been growing at 1.45% per year. The results also show that country-level TFP growth was disrupted during the aforementioned negative economic shocks.Article Citation - WoS: 10Citation - Scopus: 15Sources and Channels of International Knowledge Spillovers in Asean-5: the Role of Institutional Quality(Wiley, 2020) Dogan, Ergun; Wong, Koi NyenAssociation of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is a dynamic and outward-looking regional economy, which has made notable progress in expanding trade and investment. This paper examines whether knowledge spillovers are prevalent among ASEAN-5, focusing on the issues of which channels and which sources are the potential drivers of total factor productivity. The findings reveal that the key spillover channels are exports and non-capital imports coming from source countries such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, the G7 countries. The institutional quality plays an instrumental role in increasing total factor productivity through foreign direct investment, especially when the spillovers originate from the OECD and the G7. (c) 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Article Vertical and Horizontal Spillovers from Foreign Direct Investment: Evidence from Malaysian Manufacturing(MIT Press Journals, 2017) Dogan, Ergun; Wong, Koi Nyen; Yap, Michael M.C.Article Citation - WoS: 2Citation - Scopus: 2Job Flow Patterns and Productivity Dynamics in Turkish Manufacturing(World Scientific Publ Co Pte Ltd, 2024) Dogan, Ergun; Islam, M. Qamarul; Yazici, MehmetIn this paper, we analyze the job creation and destruction process, and the productivity dynamics in Turkish manufacturing by size, export status, import status and ownership by using a comprehensive firm-level dataset for the period of 2010-2015. Our focus is on the effect of turnover, which is due to the entry and exit of firms, on both job flows and industrial productivity growth. Our results show that while small firms contribute most to job creation, it is the large firms that contribute most to productivity growth. Regarding ownership, domestic private firms perform better than foreign firms in both job creation and productivity growth. With respect to export status, even though non-exporters outperform exporters in job creation, exporters dominate the productivity growth. As for import status, in job creation, like in the case of export status, non-importers do better but in productivity growth, unlike in the export status, no group of firms dominate, more specifically importers' and non-importers' contributions are close to each other. Another interesting finding is that, turnover effect on industry productivity is positive but very low. The role of incumbent firms in generating productivity growth is much higher than that of entering and exiting firms.Article Citation - WoS: 10Citation - Scopus: 15Trade Openness and Industrial Growth: Evidence From Nigeria(Savez Ekonomista Vojvodine, 2017) Adamu, Fahad Muhammad; Dogan, ErgunThis study examines the long-run and short-run relationship between industrial production and trade openness in Nigeria during the period from 1986 to 2008 by using quarterly data. It employs the ARDL bounds testing methodology developed by M. Hashem Pesaran, Yongcheol Shin, and Richard J. Smith (2001). The results of both the long-run analysis and the short-run error correction model (ECM) indicate that trade openness has a significant and positive impact on industrial production. The Toda-Yamamoto causality analysis shows that there is one-way Granger causality, running from trade openness to industrial production.Article Citation - WoS: 9Citation - Scopus: 9Vertical and Horizontal Spillovers From Foreign Direct Investment: Evidence From Malaysian Manufacturing(Mit Press, 2017) Dogan, Ergun; Wong, Koi Nyen; Yap, Michael M. C.Given developing countries' dependence on foreign direct investment (FDI) in manufacturing, it is important to assess the benefits that accompany FDI, given the cost of incentives that are used to attract foreign investments. We empirically analyze FDI spillover effects in Malaysia using unpublished establishment-level data, accounting for domestic firm size, the market orientation of local firms and foreign multinationals, and firm technology level and absorptive capacity. We find weak evidence of horizontal spillovers; backward and forward spillovers are negative in most cases. Because these results raise concerns about the technological capability of local firms, government policies on technology, human resource, education, and R&D should address this.Article Citation - Scopus: 1Real Exchange Rates and Job Flows: Evidence From Turkey(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2018) Islam, M. Qamarul; Yazici, Mehmet; Dogan, ErgunThis study investigates the effects of the real exchange rate on job flows in Turkish manufacturing industries between 2006 and 2015 using data at the four-digit NACE Revision 2 level. Using dynamic panel data models, we find that a real appreciation increases gross and net job creation rates, and that the effect of appreciation is magnified as the exposure to international competitiveness of industries increases. We think that this is because Turkish manufacturing firms import a greater share of their inputs compared to the firms in developed countries. Hence, an appreciation creates more jobs because lower imported input costs enable firms to outcompete foreign producers.Article Plant Size, Turnover and Productivity in Malaysian Manufacturing(2010) Doğan, Ergun; Wong, Koi NyenMalaysian manufacturing has an asymmetrical structure: small and medium-sized enterprises dominate in numbers, but contribute relatively little to total output, employment, and exports as compared to their larger counterparts. In light of an increasingly competitive environment arising from globalization, a sound knowledge of turnover patterns within the sector by plant size and its potential impact on aggregate productivity growth is imperative. We find that turnover, particularly of large plants, makes a substantial contribution to overall productivity growth in manufacturing. Hence, from a policy perspective, facilitating turnover might be as important as supporting existing plants in promoting aggregate productivity growth.Article Citation - WoS: 8Citation - Scopus: 11Firm Size and Job Creation: Evidence From Turkey(Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2017) Islam, M. Qamarul; Yazici, Mehmet; Dogan, ErgunThis study examines the relationship between firm size and job creation by using an extensive data set covering all non-farm Turkish businesses with 20 or more employees from 2003 to 2010. We find that small firms (firms with employees between 20 and 100 employees) have higher mean job flow rates (job creation, job destruction and net job creation rates) than large firms. Firm size and job flow rates are inversely related, and this relationship is especially prominent for firms with 50 employees or more. Although the overall pattern observed is also observed in both sectors, job creation rates in services are higher than the ones in manufacturing. The magnitudes of job destruction rates are comparable across sectors. Higher job creation rate in services but comparable job destruction rate results in higher net job creation rate in services. As for shares, only for smaller firms (20-49 and 50-99 size categories), job creation shares are greater than their shares in employment. But these firms have disproportionate job destruction shares as well. We also find that only the 20-49 category firms contribute to net job creation more than their share in employment. The smaller firms have high disproportionate shares in job creation and destruction in manufacturing and services as well.
