Firms procure funds not only from specialized financial intermediaries, but also from suppliers, generally by delaying payments. The empirical evidence on trade credit raises questions that are hard to reconcile with existing theories: • What justifies the widespread use of trade credit by financially unconstrained firms that have access to seemingly cheaper alternative sources? • Why is the reliance on trade credit not always increasing in the degree of credit rationing? • Does input lending affect the borrower’s choice of inputs? • Does the degree of creditor protection affect financing and input choices? This chapter addresses these questions in a unified framework
Companies in a broad range of industries and economies rely heavily on external sources to finance t...
Despite strong evidence that suppliers of inputs are usually informed lenders, the cost of trade cre...
Despite strong evidence that suppliers of inputs are usually informed lenders, the cost of trade cre...
Trade credit in the form of delayed input payments is an important source of financing for all types...
There are two fundamental puzzles about trade credit: why does it appear to be so expensive, and why...
Trade credit financing has usually been assumed to be an expensive source of funds. Recent studies, ...
Many studies examine why firms are financed by their suppliers, but few empirical studies look at th...
This paper studies supply chain financing. We investigate why a firm extends trade credit to its cus...
Assuming that firms ’ suppliers are better able to extract value from the liquidation of assets in d...
Trade credits represent an important source of financing for all corporations. Rajan and Zingales (1...
Assuming that firms' suppliers are better able to extract value from the liquidation of assets in de...
It is typically less profitable for an opportunistic borrower to divert inputs than to divert cash. ...
Companies in a broad range of industries and economies rely heavily on external sources to finance t...
Abstract: We analyse for the first time whether trade credit provided an alternative source of exter...
Abstract: This paper studies supply chain financing. We investigate why a firm extends trade credit...
Companies in a broad range of industries and economies rely heavily on external sources to finance t...
Despite strong evidence that suppliers of inputs are usually informed lenders, the cost of trade cre...
Despite strong evidence that suppliers of inputs are usually informed lenders, the cost of trade cre...
Trade credit in the form of delayed input payments is an important source of financing for all types...
There are two fundamental puzzles about trade credit: why does it appear to be so expensive, and why...
Trade credit financing has usually been assumed to be an expensive source of funds. Recent studies, ...
Many studies examine why firms are financed by their suppliers, but few empirical studies look at th...
This paper studies supply chain financing. We investigate why a firm extends trade credit to its cus...
Assuming that firms ’ suppliers are better able to extract value from the liquidation of assets in d...
Trade credits represent an important source of financing for all corporations. Rajan and Zingales (1...
Assuming that firms' suppliers are better able to extract value from the liquidation of assets in de...
It is typically less profitable for an opportunistic borrower to divert inputs than to divert cash. ...
Companies in a broad range of industries and economies rely heavily on external sources to finance t...
Abstract: We analyse for the first time whether trade credit provided an alternative source of exter...
Abstract: This paper studies supply chain financing. We investigate why a firm extends trade credit...
Companies in a broad range of industries and economies rely heavily on external sources to finance t...
Despite strong evidence that suppliers of inputs are usually informed lenders, the cost of trade cre...
Despite strong evidence that suppliers of inputs are usually informed lenders, the cost of trade cre...