exporting and firm-level credit constraints - evidence from ghana
DESCRIPTION
This paper models how firms finance their fixed costs of exporting through internal financing from retained earnings and external financing (borrowing from banks). The theoretical model features firms with heterogeneity in productivity, liquidity and collateral. It also models banks’ lending decisions explicitly, allowing for endogenous firm default rate as well as allowing for the loaned interest rate to depend on firms’ characteristics. The model predicts that credit access has a positive impact on firms’ export propensity and that this effect is only significant form firms in the intermediate range of productivity. These predictions are supported by the empirical analysis of a longitudinal data set of Ghanaian firms and the empirical results are robust to various robustness checks.TRANSCRIPT
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ERIA-DP-2015-27
ERIA Discussion Paper Series
Exporting and Firm-Level Credit Constraints
Evidence from Ghana
Mai Anh NGO
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
March 2015
Abstract: This paper models how firms finance their fixed costs of exporting
through internal financing from retained earnings and external financing
(borrowing from banks). The theoretical model featrues firms with heterogeneity in
productivity, liquidity and collateral. It also models bankslending decisions
explicitly, allowing for endogenous firm default rate as well as allowing for the
loand interest rate to depend on firmscharacteristics. The model predicts that
credit access has a positive impact on firmsexport propensity and that this effect is
only signifincant form firms in the intermediate range of producitivity. These
predicitons are suppoted by the empirical analysis of a longitudinal data set of
Ghanaian firms and the empirical resluts are robust to various robustness checks.