Do firms that state they are financially constrained tend to reinvest more of their profits?*

被引:1
|
作者
Figueroa, Camila [1 ,2 ]
Iberti, Gonzalo [3 ]
Riutort, Julio [4 ,5 ]
Wagner, Rodrigo [4 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Bank Spain, Barcelona, Spain
[2] U Autonoma Madrid, Dept Econ, Madrid, Spain
[3] Univ Diego Portales, Fac Adm & Econ, Santiago, Chile
[4] Univ Adolfo Ibanez, Business Sch, Santiago, Chile
[5] World Bank, Res & Dev Ctr Chile, Las Condes, Chile
[6] Harvard Univ, Growth Lab, Ctr Int Dev, Cambridge, MA USA
关键词
Financial constraints Entrepreneurship SMEs Retained earnings Bootstrapping Growth diagnostics; PRODUCTIVITY; DETERMINANTS; INVESTMENT; CREDIT; ACCESS; MISALLOCATION; DEPENDENCE; PRIVATE; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1016/j.irfa.2023.102902
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
Firms in global surveys often state that access to finance is their primary obstacle to growth. However, merely stating that access to finance is an obstacle does not necessarily imply the firm is financially constrained. We examine the idea that firms facing external finance constraints should in theory reinvest profits more heavily, as some canonical models in financial economics predict. We test this prediction using global firm surveys from 2006 to 2019. We do not find such higher profit reinvestment among firms that state finance is their most important obstacle. This puzzling null finding is robust to alternative measures of profit reinvestment and many alternative confounders. In contrast to stated constraints, profit reinvestment is in fact higher for non-stated measures of financial constraints (e.g. younger or smaller firms, as well as firms in sectors with fewer tangible assets). Overall, our findings suggest that these self-assessments of a main obstacle might be due to other reasons, beyond access to funds that finance capital investment.
引用
收藏
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] License prices for financially constrained firms
    Roberto Burguet
    R. Preston McAfee
    Journal of Regulatory Economics, 2009, 36 : 178 - 198
  • [2] License prices for financially constrained firms
    Burguet, Roberto
    McAfee, R. Preston
    JOURNAL OF REGULATORY ECONOMICS, 2009, 36 (02) : 178 - 198
  • [3] Are Firms from European Union Financially-Stressed Countries More Credit Constrained?
    Dumitru, Ionut
    Dumitru, Ionela
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BUSINESS EXCELLENCE, 2024, 18 (01): : 120 - 129
  • [4] The complex dynamics of financially constrained heterogeneous firms
    Agliari, Anna
    Delli Gatti, Domenico
    Gallegati, Mauro
    Lenci, Stefano
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION, 2006, 61 (04) : 784 - 803
  • [5] Are firms in "backward" areas of developed regions more financially constrained? The case of Italian SMEs
    Donati, Cristiana
    Sarno, Domenico
    INDUSTRIAL AND CORPORATE CHANGE, 2015, 24 (06) : 1353 - 1375
  • [6] Do environmentally sustainable practices lead to financially less constrained firms? International evidence
    Banerjee, Rajabrata
    Gupta, Kartick
    Mudalige, Priyantha
    INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, 2020, 68
  • [7] Are financially constrained firms susceptible to a stock price crash?
    He, Guanming
    Ren, Helen Mengbing
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FINANCE, 2023, 29 (06): : 612 - 637
  • [8] Are firms accessing venture funding more financially constrained? New evidence from capital structure adjustments
    Balboa, Marina
    Marti, Jose
    Tresierra-Tanaka, Alvaro
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF FINANCE, 2017, 23 (03): : 243 - 265
  • [9] Do Excess Funds Make Financially Constrained Firms Better Off? Evidence from IPOs in China
    Cao, Chunfang
    Hou, Wenxuan
    Liu, Xiumei
    Pan, Hongbo
    ABACUS-A JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING FINANCE AND BUSINESS STUDIES, 2023, 59 (03): : 818 - 846
  • [10] Issuer bias in corporate ratings toward financially constrained firms
    Hasan, Mohammad
    Kapadia, Nikunj
    Siddique, Akhtar
    JOURNAL OF CREDIT RISK, 2017, 13 (04): : 1 - 35