Financial Inclusion, Bank Concentration, and Firm Performance
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Band 97, S. 1-13
5 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: World development: the multi-disciplinary international journal devoted to the study and promotion of world development, Band 97, S. 1-13
International audience ; This study focuses on the impact financial development on the performance of firmsin countries with low financial development. Previous studies focusing on financial depth alone find thatfinancial development does not affect, or has a negative effect on, economic growth in developing countrieswith undersized financial systems. Using firm-level data in panel for a sample of 26 countries, we find thatthis hypothesis is invalidated if one takes into account not only financial depth but also financial inclusion,i.e.the distribution of access to financial services. Contrary to developed countries where financial inclusionis nearly universal, differences in access to credit among firms help explaining differences in firms perfor-mance. We measure financial inclusion as the share of firms who have access to bank overdraft facilities, or,alternatively, to any external source of financing, at the sectoral level. We find that whereas financial devel-opment does not affect firm performance on average, financial inclusion has a positive effect on firms growth.Where financial inclusion is low, financial development may create crowding out effects in favor of a minorityof firms or government that phase out or reverse its expected positive effects of financial development ongrowth. Additional testing show that these effects affect all firms, irrespective of size, or whether they haveaccess to bank credit or not. We interpret these results as showing that financial deepening increases firmsgrowth only if it widely distributed among firms, i. e. financial inclusion is high.
BASE
International audience ; This study focuses on the impact financial development on the performance of firmsin countries with low financial development. Previous studies focusing on financial depth alone find thatfinancial development does not affect, or has a negative effect on, economic growth in developing countrieswith undersized financial systems. Using firm-level data in panel for a sample of 26 countries, we find thatthis hypothesis is invalidated if one takes into account not only financial depth but also financial inclusion,i.e.the distribution of access to financial services. Contrary to developed countries where financial inclusionis nearly universal, differences in access to credit among firms help explaining differences in firms perfor-mance. We measure financial inclusion as the share of firms who have access to bank overdraft facilities, or,alternatively, to any external source of financing, at the sectoral level. We find that whereas financial devel-opment does not affect firm performance on average, financial inclusion has a positive effect on firms growth.Where financial inclusion is low, financial development may create crowding out effects in favor of a minorityof firms or government that phase out or reverse its expected positive effects of financial development ongrowth. Additional testing show that these effects affect all firms, irrespective of size, or whether they haveaccess to bank credit or not. We interpret these results as showing that financial deepening increases firmsgrowth only if it widely distributed among firms, i. e. financial inclusion is high.
BASE
In: Banque de France Working Paper No. 822
SSRN
In: Banque de France Working Paper, May 2019, WP #721
SSRN
Working paper