Abstract
This paper contributes to the literature on the effect of venture capital (VC) on the economic development of areas in which those specialized investors are active. The work focuses on the separate consideration of two effects that are supposed to explain the superior performance of a large sample of Spanish VC-backed firms, namely funding and value-added services provided by VC managers to their investee firms. The results show that funding is significant regardless of the stage of development of the investee firm. The value added, however, is only significant for the subsample of firms at the expansion stage.
Notes
1. A previous version of this paper is published as Working Paper 501 in the Working Paper Series Collection of the Fundación de las Cajas de Ahorros (FUNCAS).