Collateral requirements, cost of credit, and firms’ discouragement from applying for bank loans
Title | Collateral requirements, cost of credit, and firms’ discouragement from applying for bank loans |
Publication Type | Working Paper |
Year of Publication | 2024 |
Authors | Arca, P, Atzeni, G, Deidda, L |
Number | 24_17 |
ISBN Number | 978 88 68515 447 |
Keywords | cost of application, Credit rationing, denied, discouraged, loans to collateral value, multinomial logit |
Abstract | Using the BEEPS dataset on Eastern European and Central Asian firms, we investigate how the collateral requirements and the cost of credit expected by firms might discourage them from applying for credit. Based on the data we identify four reported discouragement reasons: (A) high probability of rejection, (B) high cost of credit, (C) high cost of application, (D) and other reasons. We develop a simple statistical model to derive the following set of predictions about the impact of expected collateral requirements and cost of credit on discouragement. First, collateral requirements and cost of credit should induce discouragement across all reported reasons. Second, higher expected collateral requirements and cost of credit should have a lower effect when the reported reason is (A). If the firm already fears rejection, a higher collateral requirement or a higher cost of credit should play little role. Third, collateral requirements should have a larger impact when the reported reason is (B). If the firm is discouraged by the high cost of credit rather than the fear of rejection, an increase in the expected collateral requirements becomes more significant as it may add the risk of rejection as an additional concern for the firm. We test these predictions using a multinomial logit model and we find robust evidence that supports all of them.
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Citation Key | 8919 |
Attachment | Size |
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wp-24-17.pdf | 1.02 MB |