Using a large random sample of U.K. start-ups and a rich data set, the paper demonstrates that human capital is the 'true' determinant of survival and that the correlation between financial capital and survival is spurious. Provision of finance is demand-driven, with banks supplying funds elastically and business requests governing take-up. Firms self-select for funds on the basis of the human capital endowments of the proprietors with 'better' businesses more likely to borrow. A reason why others have seemingly identified start-up debt gaps may be the failure to test a sufficiently rich empirical model. Copyright 1996 by Royal Economic Society.
Given variance in entrepreneurs’ capital endowments, the question of sufficient (or insufficient) st...
This article investigates empirically whether and to what extent initial capital constraints hinder ...
We establish the relevance of human capital to startup financing. Using administrative databases fro...
We use data from the Kauffman Firm Surveys to analyze how the initial capital-structure decision of ...
Lack of capital (liquidity constraints) is one of the oldest explanations advanced to explain lack o...
We use data from Kauffman Firm Surveys to analyze the capital-structure decisions of U.S. start-up f...
This paper investigates the role of initial financial conditions (debt-to-asset ratio) on the durati...
Business start-ups lack prior history and reputation, face high default risk, and have highly concen...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Are investments by new firms constrained by access to financing? If so, are the constraints persiste...
Start-ups mostly have only limited internal financing. Post-entry performance should thus strongly d...
International audienceWe investigated the relation between the survival of new small businesses and ...
International audienceWe extend a model developed by Evans and Jovanovic (1989) to explain when star...
The purpose of this paper is to explore determinants of the debt financing of FinTech start-ups. Usi...
We investigate the effects of the recent financial crisis on start‐up financing and survival using a...
Given variance in entrepreneurs’ capital endowments, the question of sufficient (or insufficient) st...
This article investigates empirically whether and to what extent initial capital constraints hinder ...
We establish the relevance of human capital to startup financing. Using administrative databases fro...
We use data from the Kauffman Firm Surveys to analyze how the initial capital-structure decision of ...
Lack of capital (liquidity constraints) is one of the oldest explanations advanced to explain lack o...
We use data from Kauffman Firm Surveys to analyze the capital-structure decisions of U.S. start-up f...
This paper investigates the role of initial financial conditions (debt-to-asset ratio) on the durati...
Business start-ups lack prior history and reputation, face high default risk, and have highly concen...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Are investments by new firms constrained by access to financing? If so, are the constraints persiste...
Start-ups mostly have only limited internal financing. Post-entry performance should thus strongly d...
International audienceWe investigated the relation between the survival of new small businesses and ...
International audienceWe extend a model developed by Evans and Jovanovic (1989) to explain when star...
The purpose of this paper is to explore determinants of the debt financing of FinTech start-ups. Usi...
We investigate the effects of the recent financial crisis on start‐up financing and survival using a...
Given variance in entrepreneurs’ capital endowments, the question of sufficient (or insufficient) st...
This article investigates empirically whether and to what extent initial capital constraints hinder ...
We establish the relevance of human capital to startup financing. Using administrative databases fro...