Credit Supply Shocks, Network Effects, and the Real Economy

Author(s):  
Laura Alfaro ◽  
Manuel Garcca-Santana ◽  
Enrique Moral-Benito
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 284-306
Author(s):  
Hongbin Huang ◽  
Ran Li ◽  
Ya Bai

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to study the influence of investor sentiment on the supply of trade credit, and further explores the difference of the effect of investor sentiment on the supply of trade credit in the environment of strong market competition and weak market competition. Design/methodology/approach The authors use panel estimation techniques to examine the impact of investor sentiment in the Chinese securities market on the supply of corporate trade credit. Findings This paper finds that investor sentiment has positive impact on trade credit through three channels of motivation, willingness and ability. At the same time, this paper finds that investor sentiment has stronger impact on enterprises in strong market competition than enterprises in weak market competition. Research limitations/implications This paper expands the research on the influence of virtual economy on the real economy, analyzes the difference of the influence of investor sentiment on the supply of trade credit under different market competition conditions. Practical implications The paper perfects the mechanism of trade credit decision-making at this stage, and provides more evidence for the virtual economy to act on the real economy. Social implications This paper provides a theoretical basis for the government functional departments to use the investor sentiment to play a positive role in trade credit to improve the market competition and guide the development of China’s capital market in the direction of rationalization and health. Originality/value In combination with market competition environment and industry characteristics, this paper investigates external irrational factors and studies how investor sentiment affects trade credit supply.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-44
Author(s):  
Nadav Ben Zeev

Abstract Recent work stresses a potentially important relation between credit supply shocks and aggregate TFP based on factor misallocation. I take three steps to examine this relation. First, using state-of-the-art credit supply shock and aggregate TFP measures, I show that an adverse credit supply shock has a weak and very short-lived effect on aggregate TFP. Second, using firm-level data, I show that firm-level capital stock responses to an adverse credit supply shock produce an insignificant and negligible capital-misallocation-induced TFP response. Third, using employment data by fine firm size category classification, I also find a negligible labor-misallocation-induced TFP response. These findings suggest that the TFP channel of credit supply shocks has a limited role in their transmission to the real economy.


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