The distance between small firms and their lenders in the United States is increasing. Not only are firms choosing more distant lenders, they are also communicating with them in more impersonal ways. After documenting these systematic changes, we demonstrate that they do not stem from small firms locating differently, from simple consolidation in the banking industry, or from biases in the sample. Instead, they seem correlated with improvements in bank productivity. We conjecture that greater, and more timely, availability of borrower credit records, as well as the greater ease of processing these may explain the increased lending at a distance. Consistent with such an explanation, distant firms no longer have to be observably the highest q...
Despite being informationally opaque, small firms often switch from their primary financial instit...
A recent string of theoretical papers has highlighted the importance of geographical distance in exp...
Despite being informationally opaque, small firms often switch from their primary financial institut...
In a seminal article on small business lending, Petersen & Rajan (2002) argue that technological cha...
This paper provides empirical confirmation for Petersen and Rajan’s (J Finance 57:2533–2570, 2002) w...
Over the past decade, the distances between small businesses and their bank lenders have increased s...
Deregulation and technological change have reduced the transactions costs that led to the dominance ...
Using a unique and massive firm-bank matched panel dataset, this paper examines the causal link betw...
Consolidation of the banking industry is shifting assets into larger institutions that often operate...
A recent string of theoretical papers highlights the importance of geographical distance in explaini...
Increasing globalization results in that companies are becoming more rootless and complex. In this h...
I tests whether the market for small business lending is integrated by examining the exposure of dif...
Innovations such as credit scoring have increased the ability of banks to lend to distant busi-ness ...
We study the effects of physical distance on the acquisition and use of private information in infor...
Non-bank loans to corporate businesses have shown a dramatic increase compared to bank loans. Despit...
Despite being informationally opaque, small firms often switch from their primary financial instit...
A recent string of theoretical papers has highlighted the importance of geographical distance in exp...
Despite being informationally opaque, small firms often switch from their primary financial institut...
In a seminal article on small business lending, Petersen & Rajan (2002) argue that technological cha...
This paper provides empirical confirmation for Petersen and Rajan’s (J Finance 57:2533–2570, 2002) w...
Over the past decade, the distances between small businesses and their bank lenders have increased s...
Deregulation and technological change have reduced the transactions costs that led to the dominance ...
Using a unique and massive firm-bank matched panel dataset, this paper examines the causal link betw...
Consolidation of the banking industry is shifting assets into larger institutions that often operate...
A recent string of theoretical papers highlights the importance of geographical distance in explaini...
Increasing globalization results in that companies are becoming more rootless and complex. In this h...
I tests whether the market for small business lending is integrated by examining the exposure of dif...
Innovations such as credit scoring have increased the ability of banks to lend to distant busi-ness ...
We study the effects of physical distance on the acquisition and use of private information in infor...
Non-bank loans to corporate businesses have shown a dramatic increase compared to bank loans. Despit...
Despite being informationally opaque, small firms often switch from their primary financial instit...
A recent string of theoretical papers has highlighted the importance of geographical distance in exp...
Despite being informationally opaque, small firms often switch from their primary financial institut...