Assessing Firms' Financing Constraints in Brazil

Firm surveys often indicate that firms complain a lot about lack of access to financial services, but financing constraints are difficult to identify, given demand and supply considerations and with only surveys based on firms' perceptions. Specifically, it is difficult to separate demand for access to finance of viable firms with good growth opportunities from that of firms that are not creditworthy and should not deserve financing. In Brazil, one of the main constraints to finance is related to the high level of interest rates, which affects both bank funding costs as well as bank intermediation spreads and, as such, the cost of finance and hence the demand and supply of bank financing. This paper analyzes a unique loan level data set that covers almost a decade of monthly firm bank information from credit registry information that is not publicly available as well as two cross-sections of Brazil's Investment Climate Assessment surveys in 2004 and 2008 that provide detailed information on firms' micro characteristics as well as perceptions of credit. The data allow identification of how firms' characteristics, banks' characteristics, and macro variables affect firms' demand for credit, banks' supply of credit, and access to credit. The paper finds first that access to finance for firms has improved over the decade for small firms, reflecting the deepening of the credit markets. However, access to credit depends strongly on information availability captured in the positive influence of collateral and credit history. Banks perceive that it is less risky to lend to firms that the banks know or that other banks know. Second, firms' loan demand is inelastic to the interest rate at the individual loan category level, possibly reflecting some screening and pricing; however, when the loans are aggregated, the effect of interest rates becomes significant and negative as expected. Third, firms loan demand and loan supply are affected by the availability of collateral and, in the case of loan demand, longer maturity. Policy implications point to the importance of reducing asymmetric information between lenders and borrowers and on collateral to alleviate financing constraints for small firms.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Claessens, Stijn, Sakho, Yaye Seynabou
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-09
Subjects:ACCESS TO BANK, ACCESS TO CREDIT, ACCESS TO FINANCE, ACCESS TO FINANCIAL SERVICES, ACCESS TO FINANCING, ANTI-CREDITOR, APPLICATION PROCEDURES, ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION, AVAILABILITY OF COLLATERAL, BALANCE SHEET, BANK ACCOUNT, BANK CHARGES, BANK CREDIT, BANK FINANCING, BANK INTEREST RATES, BANK INTERMEDIATION, BANK LENDING, BANK LENDING RELATIONSHIP, BANK LIQUIDITY, BANK LOAN, BANK LOANS, BANK MONITORING, BANKING CRISIS, BANKING MARKETS, BANKING SYSTEM, BANKING SYSTEMS, BANKS, BIASES, BORROWER, BORROWING, BUSINESS CREDIT, BUSINESS CYCLE, CAPITAL LOANS, CAPITAL STOCK, CAPITAL STRUCTURE, CASH FLOW, CASH FLOWS, CASH PAYMENT, CD, CENTRAL BANK, COLLATERAL, COLLATERAL REQUIREMENT, COLLATERALS, COMMERCIAL BANKS, CONTRACT DESIGN, CONTRACT ENFORCEABILITY, CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT, CORPORATE FINANCING, CORPORATE INVESTMENT, CORRUPTION, COST OF CAPITAL, COST OF CREDIT, COURT RULING, CREDIT ACCESS, CREDIT CRUNCH, CREDIT GROWTH, CREDIT HISTORY, CREDIT INFORMATION, CREDIT INSTRUMENT, CREDIT LIMIT, CREDIT LINE, CREDIT LINES, CREDIT MARKET, CREDIT MARKETS, CREDIT RATIONING, CREDIT RECORD, CREDIT REGISTRIES, CREDIT REGISTRY, CREDIT RISK, CREDITOR, CREDITOR CLAIM, CREDITORS, CREDITWORTHINESS, DEBT, DEBT OUTSTANDING, DEBTORS, DEMAND FOR CREDIT, DEPENDENT, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DIRECTED CREDIT, DISCRIMINATION, DOMESTIC BANK, DOMESTIC CREDIT, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC SYSTEMS, EMERGING MARKET, EQUILIBRIUM CREDIT, EQUILIBRIUM CREDIT RATIONING, EQUITY RATIO, EXCLUSION, EXTERNAL FINANCING, EXTERNAL FINANCING CONSTRAINTS, FINANCES, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FINANCIAL INFORMATION, FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION, FINANCIAL MARKET, FINANCIAL PLANNING, FINANCIAL SERVICE, FINANCIAL SERVICE PROVIDERS, FINANCIAL STUDIES, FINANCIAL SYSTEMS, FINANCING CONSTRAINT, FINANCING CONSTRAINTS, GROWTH OPPORTUNITIES, HIGH INTEREST RATES, HOUSEHOLDS, HUMAN RESOURCES, INCOME GROUP, INCOME STATEMENT, INDIVIDUAL LOAN, INFLATION, INFORMATION ASYMMETRY, INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT, INSTRUMENT, INTEREST RATE, INTEREST RATE VOLATILITY, INTEREST RATES, INTEREST RATES FOR LOAN, INTERMEDIATION SPREADS, INTERNAL FINANCING, INTERNAL FUNDS, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INVENTORIES, INVESTMENT CLIMATE, INVESTMENT DECISION, INVESTMENT DECISIONS, INVESTMENT FINANCING, INVESTMENT FUNDS, INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES, JOB CREATION, JUDGE, JUDGES, JUDICIAL EXECUTION, JUDICIAL SYSTEM, JURISDICTION, LACK OF ACCESS, LACK OF COLLATERAL, LACK OF COMPETITION, LACK OF CREDIT, LARGE FIRMS, LEGAL CONSTRAINTS, LENDERS, LENDING INTEREST RATES, LEVEL OF INTEREST RATES, LIABILITY, LINE OF CREDIT, LOAN, LOAN CATEGORIES, LOAN CATEGORY, LOAN CHARACTERISTICS, LOAN CONTRACTS, LOAN DEMAND, LOAN MARKET, LOAN MATURITY, LOAN RATE, LOAN REQUEST, LOAN VOLUMES, MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS, MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY, MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES, MACROECONOMICS, MARKET COMPETITION, MARKET CONDITIONS, MARKET DEEPENING, MARKET FAILURES, MARKET LIQUIDITY, MARKET STRUCTURE, MARKET VALUE, MATURITIES, MONETARY FUND, MONETARY POLICY, OBSTACLES TO GROWTH, OPPORTUNITY COST, OUTSTANDING DEBT, OUTSTANDING DEBTS, OVERDRAFT, OVERDRAFT LOANS, OVERDRAFTS, PARTNER BANK, PERC, POOR COLLATERAL, POOR CREDIT, POOR CREDIT HISTORY, PRIVATE BANKS, PRIVATE CREDIT, PRODUCTIVITY, PROFITABILITY, PROMISSORY NOTE, PROMISSORY NOTES, PUBLIC BANK, PUBLIC BANKS, REAL INTEREST, REAL INTEREST RATE, REAL INTEREST RATES, REGISTRY DATA, REGISTRY SYSTEM, REGULATORY POLICY, RESERVE, RESERVE BANK, RESERVE BANK OF AUSTRALIA, RETURNS, SETTLEMENT, SHORT-TERM INTEREST RATES, SHORT-TERM TRADE FINANCE, SMALL BANKS, SMALL BUSINESS, SMALL BUSINESS FINANCE, SMALL LOANS, SOURCES OF FINANCE, STOCK MARKETS, SUPPLY OF CREDIT, TAX, TAX RATES, TAXATION, TERM CREDIT, TOTAL_DEBT, TRADE CREDITS, TRANSACTION, TRANSACTIONS COSTS, USE OF COLLATERAL, USURY, USURY LAWS, WORKING CAPITAL,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/09/18321821/assessing-firms-financing-constraints-brazil
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/16842
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