This paper investigates what induces small firms in an emerging market economy to borrow dollar credit from domestic banks. Our data are from a unique survey of firms in Lebanon. The findings complement studies of large firms with foreign currency loans from foreign lenders. Exporters, naturally hedged against currency risk, are more likely to incur dollar debt. Firms also partly hedge themselves by passing currency risk to customers and suppliers. Less opaque firms with easily verifiable collateral and higher net worth are more likely to access dollar credit. Firms reliant on formal financing (banks and supplier credit) are more likely to contract dollar debt than firms reliant on informal financing (family, friends and moneylenders). Bank relationships, however, do not increase the dollar debt likelihood. And finally, profitable firms are less likely to have dollar debt. Information frictions and limited collateral, therefore, constrain dollar credit even when it is intermediated domestically. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
机构:
Univ Incarnate Word, HEB Sch Business & Adm, Dept Int Business, San Antonio, TX 78209 USAUniv Incarnate Word, HEB Sch Business & Adm, Dept Int Business, San Antonio, TX 78209 USA
Oyedele, Adesegun
Firat, Fuat
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机构:
Univ Texas Rio Grande Valley, Dept Mkt, Coll Business & Entrepreneurship, Edinburg, TX USAUniv Incarnate Word, HEB Sch Business & Adm, Dept Int Business, San Antonio, TX 78209 USA
机构:
Hong Kong Monetary Author, Res Dept, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
55-F,Two Int Finance Ctr,8 Finance St, Hong Kong, Peoples R ChinaHong Kong Monetary Author, Res Dept, Hong Kong, Peoples R China