The Causal Effect of Bankruptcy Law on the Cost of Finance

Author(s):  
Nicolas Andre Benigno Serrano-Velarde ◽  
Giacomo Rodano ◽  
Emanuele Tarantino
Author(s):  
Giacomo Rodano ◽  
Nicolas Andre Benigno Serrano-Velarde ◽  
Emanuele Tarantino

Author(s):  
Saptarshi Chakraborty

Some countries spend a relatively large percentage of GDP on their militaries in order to preserve or secure their status as global powers. Others do so because they are ruled by military governments or aggressive regimes that pose a military threat to their neighbors or their own populations. It is debatable whether there is a causal relationship between military spending and economic growth in the economy. It is again a policy debate how much to allocate funds for civilian and how much for military expenditure. Under these puzzling results of the impact of military expenditure on economic growth which is frequently found to be non-significant or negative, yet most countries spend a large fraction of their GDP on defense and the military. The chapter tries to investigate the relationship between military spending and economic growth in India. It also sees whether external threats, corruption, and other relevant controls have any causal effect. This chapter obtains that additional expenditure on Indian military in the presence of additional threat is significantly detrimental to growth implying that India cannot afford to fight or demonstrate power at the cost of its development.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 207-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Yang ◽  
Morley Gunderson

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to estimate the causal effect of minimum wages (MWs) on the wages, employment and hours of migrant workers in China, and to show their inter-relatedness and how employers can offset some of the costs through subtle adjustments. This paper also illustrates the importance of disaggregating by region and sex. Design/methodology/approach Causal estimates are provided through difference-in-differences (DID) analysis, and robustness checks through propensity score matching. The analysis is based on micro data at the individual level from the household survey on migrant workers by the National Population and Family Planning Commission, combined with macro data regarding municipalities’ population, GDP and employment information based on the China Economic Information Network database. Findings MW increases for those paid by the month increased the earnings of both low-wage males and females. However, males tend not to experience an adverse employment effect because part of the cost increase is offset by employers increasing their monthly hours of work. Hours of work do not increase for females, so they experience an adverse employment effect. This highlights the importance of examining cost offsets such as increases in hours of work, as well as analyzing effects separately for males and females. Research limitations/implications The reason behind why employers offset some of the cost increase for males paid by the month by increasing their hours of work, but this cost-offsetting adjustment does not occur for females is uncertain. Social implications For workers paid by the month, employers can offset some of the cost increase by increasing their hours of work, leading to no reductions in employment. But this adjustment occurs only for males. Hours are not increased for females, but they experience reductions in employment. Clearly, MW increases have adverse effects either in the form of employment reductions (for females) or increases in hours of work for the same monthly pay (for males). Originality/value This paper provides causal estimates through DID analysis and robustness checks through Propensity Score Matching, and also indicates how employers can offset the cost of MW increases by increasing hours for those paid by the month, resulting in no adverse employment effect for such workers, but an adverse employment effect when such an adjustment does not occur.


2017 ◽  
Vol 107 (11) ◽  
pp. 3415-3446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aditya Aladangady

Rising home values also raise the cost of living, offsetting their impact on consumption. However, additional home equity collateral can loosen borrowing constraints, increasing spending for households that value their current endowment of housing highly. I use geographically linked microdata to exploit regional heterogeneity in housing markets and identify the causal effect of house price fluctuations on consumer spending. A $1 increase in home values leads to a $0.047 increase in spending for homeowners, but a negligible response for renters. Results reflect large responses among credit constrained households, suggesting looser borrowing constraints are a primary driver of the MPC out of housing wealth. (JEL D12, D14, E21, R31)


2017 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 462-500 ◽  
Author(s):  
Timothy W. Cobban

In recent decades, the belief that larger municipalities can better capture economies of scale led to compulsory amalgamations in several countries. This article examines such a program of compulsory amalgamations in Ontario, Canada, during the late 1990s and early 2000s. By exogenously deciding on a course of municipal restructuring, and leaving a large comparison group of nonamalgamated municipalities within the same institutional framework, the Ontario reforms created a quasi-experiment on the importance of scale for local government. Using a difference-in-differences methodological approach, this article exploits the quasi-experimental setting of the Ontario reforms to examine the causal effect of jurisdiction size on the cost of local administration. The main empirical finding in this article is that increasing local jurisdiction size reduces the cost of local administration. The results provide the most convincing evidence to date that economies of scale exist in local administration and can be captured through consolidation.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josue Diwambuena ◽  
Ishara Musimwa ◽  
Jean-Paul K. Tsasa

Abstract We document some evidence about effects of the Covid-19 pandemic on the cost of living in developing countries. We use data from the National Statistical Office of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Data are in weekly frequency. We propose a simple two-step strategy to evaluate the Covid-19 effect on the cost of living in the DRC. We consider two types of households: a typical household for the DRC and a typical household for Kinshasa –Kinshasa is the national capital and the largest city of the DRC. Then we compute the quasi-causal effect and the volatility differential for each household type. We show: First, in absolute terms, the consumption basket for a typical household in Kinshasa exhibits both a higher quasi-causal effect and a higher volatility differential than those observed from the consumption basket of a typical household for the whole country (i.e. the DRC). Second, in relative terms, the consumption basket for a typical household in Kinshasa exhibits higher quasi-causal effects than that for a typical household only in prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages and in prices of transport. Finally and more importantly, unlike developed countries where consumers spent more on food and other groceries during the pandemic, our results suggest that in response to the Covid-19 crisis, both the typical household in DRC and the typical household in Kinshasa spent more on health and communication. These findings highlight deep structural differences between developed countries, where health insurance is functional, and developing countries where patients generally face a deficit or lack of viable health insurance. Moreover, we argue expenditures on communication increased in response mainly to the lockdown measures, mobility restrictions or closing of national borders.


2008 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 47-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruno Funchal ◽  
Fernando Caio Galdi ◽  
Paulo C. Coimbra

This paper examines the relationship between corporate governance level and the bankruptcy law to such debt variables as firms’ cost of debt and amount of debt under uncertainty (in the Knight´s sense). First we find that the better the corporate governance and the harsher bankruptcy law, the lower the cost of debt. Second, we find that better governance and a harsher bankruptcy laws have a positive effect on debt. As consequence, firms increase their set of investment projects financed by creditors. Finally, uncertainty has a negative effect on terms of debt (higher interest rate and smaller set of financed investment projects) and such effect is stronger for firms with worse corporate governance and for economies with a bankruptcy law that is lenient to debtors.


1998 ◽  
Vol 72 (1) ◽  
pp. 86-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bradley Hansen

Throughout the nineteenth century, merchants and manufacturers involved in interstate commerce sought federal bankruptcy legislation to overcome diverse and discriminatory state laws that raised the cost of credit and impeded interstate trade. In the last two decades of the nineteenth century, they formed a national organization to lobby for bankruptcy legislation. While many scholars have seen the passage of federal bankruptcy legislation as a response to the economic depression of the 1890s, this article shows that it was the formation of this national organization, rather than the economic crisis, that was the primary force behind the Bankruptcy Act of 1898.


Author(s):  
Huasheng Gao ◽  
Kai Li ◽  
Yujing Ma

Abstract We examine the causal effect of stakeholder orientation on firms’ cost of debt. Our test exploits the staggered state-level adoption of constituency statutes, which allows directors to consider stakeholders’ interests when making business decisions. We find a significant drop in loan spreads for firms incorporated in states that adopted such statutes relative to firms incorporated elsewhere. We further show that constituency statutes reduce the cost of debt through the channels of mitigating conflicts of interest between residual and fixed claimants and between holders of liquid claims and holders of illiquid claims, limiting legal liability and lowering takeover threats.


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