This paper presents a simple model relating firm age with firm size and access to credit markets. Lending to new firms is risky because lenders have had no time to accumulate observations about them. As a result, interest rates are high and loans are small for entering firms. As firms need credit to operate, credit markets impose a limit on the scale of operation of new firms. Reputation building by the firms allows markets to overcome these difficulties over time. Large firms face lower interest rates than small firms, and credit markets fluctuations are shown to have different effects on firms of different size
This paper examines the effect that the coexistence of small and large banks, with different interes...
Literature pertaining to the “liability of newness†contends that newer firms face particular dif...
Mainstream neoclassical economics predicts that financial markets will operate in a frictionless man...
This paper presents a simple model relating firm age with firm size and access to credit markets. Le...
This paper examines the role of interest rates and securities within the context of the small firm -...
Do large firms and small firms behave differently when credit becomes more costly or harder to obtai...
This paper examines how bank competition affects the amount of credit provided to small businesses u...
Drawing upon data from the 2007 UK Survey of SME Finance, the current analysis is concerned with the...
We study the effect of relationship lending on small firms' failure probability using a uniquely ric...
Consolidation of the banking industry is shifting assets into larger institutions that often operate...
The financing of small-medium enterprises (SME' s) shows a great dependence on short term borrowing ...
When firms experience financial hierarchy, external finance, if at all available, is substantially m...
In this paper, we investigate how personal bankruptcy law affects small firms' access to credit. Whe...
This study analyzes the effect of financial constraints (FCs) on firm dynamics. We measure FCs with ...
In the 1950s Gurley and Shaw (1955) began emphasizing the role of intermediaries in the credit suppl...
This paper examines the effect that the coexistence of small and large banks, with different interes...
Literature pertaining to the “liability of newness†contends that newer firms face particular dif...
Mainstream neoclassical economics predicts that financial markets will operate in a frictionless man...
This paper presents a simple model relating firm age with firm size and access to credit markets. Le...
This paper examines the role of interest rates and securities within the context of the small firm -...
Do large firms and small firms behave differently when credit becomes more costly or harder to obtai...
This paper examines how bank competition affects the amount of credit provided to small businesses u...
Drawing upon data from the 2007 UK Survey of SME Finance, the current analysis is concerned with the...
We study the effect of relationship lending on small firms' failure probability using a uniquely ric...
Consolidation of the banking industry is shifting assets into larger institutions that often operate...
The financing of small-medium enterprises (SME' s) shows a great dependence on short term borrowing ...
When firms experience financial hierarchy, external finance, if at all available, is substantially m...
In this paper, we investigate how personal bankruptcy law affects small firms' access to credit. Whe...
This study analyzes the effect of financial constraints (FCs) on firm dynamics. We measure FCs with ...
In the 1950s Gurley and Shaw (1955) began emphasizing the role of intermediaries in the credit suppl...
This paper examines the effect that the coexistence of small and large banks, with different interes...
Literature pertaining to the “liability of newness†contends that newer firms face particular dif...
Mainstream neoclassical economics predicts that financial markets will operate in a frictionless man...