Corporate Financing and Investment: The Firm-Level Dynamics of the Credit Multiplier

Author(s):  
Murillo Campello ◽  
Dirk Hackbarth
Author(s):  
Hong Chen ◽  
Murray Z Frank

Abstract Extensive empirical research concerning the impact of taxes on corporate decisions has had trouble identifying seemingly obvious effects. Perhaps the problem is that the seemingly obvious tax predictions are not quite right. We provide an equilibrium model with both corporate and personal taxes. In the steady-state equilibrium, the corporate tax rate affects the level of production despite interest deductibility at the firm level, but not household-level taxes on interest earnings or dividends. We prove several other tax irrelevance results and document a Laffer curve in the corporate tax rate.


2010 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 555-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Lemmon ◽  
Michael R. Roberts

AbstractWe examine how shocks to the supply of credit impact corporate financing and investment using the collapse of Drexel Burnham Lambert, Inc.; the passage of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989; and regulatory changes in the insurance industry as an exogenous contraction in the supply of below-investment-grade credit after 1989. A difference-in-differences empirical strategy reveals that substitution to bank debt and alternative sources of capital (e.g., equity, cash balances, and trade credit) was limited, leading to an almost one-for-one decline in net investment with the decline in net debt issuances. Despite this sharp change in behavior, corporate leverage ratios remained relatively stable, a result of the contemporaneous decline in debt issuances and investment. Overall, our findings highlight how even large firms with access to public credit markets are susceptible to fluctuations in the supply of capital.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
John A. Doukas ◽  
Chansog (Francis) Kim ◽  
Christos Pantzalis

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