This paper explains both capital-structure and debt-maturity choices for SMEs in terms of institutional differences at the local level, making use of regions as the unit of analysis. Specifically, the article considers local financial development and the effectiveness of the local enforcement system, controlling for firm-specific characteristics. The ability of the local financial market to provide funds efficiently is of particular interest to SMEs, due to the fact that large firms can tolerate imperfections in the local financial system by moving to international, more highly integrated financial markets. The main findings of the analysis suggest that capital-structure and debt-maturity choices interact as complementary factors and that corporate financial decisions are not only the result of firm-specific or industry-specific characteristics, but are also based on the institutional climate in which a firm operates. After controlling for heterogeneity in firm characteristics, leverage was found to be positively influenced by local financial development, while the enforcement system was less relevant. Conversely, debt maturity was longer in regions with high levels of law enforcement, whereas local financial development did not play a relevant role.
We investigate the relation between local financial development and trade credit in an integrated financial market. Our results suggest that trade credit complements the formal finance of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) at the local level. Provincial banking development in Italy increases the provision of trade credit by SMEs and stimulates the redistribution of loans via trade credit. However, cooperative banking reduces the use of trade credit at the local level. Evidence shows that lower levels of provincial banking development are linked with a stronger decline in trade credit at the start of the global financial crisis. We also find that SMEs in provinces with industrial districts use more trade credit. Our results confirm that local differences in banking development and the trade credit policy of SMEs within countries matter, adding to earlier findings that the provision of trade credit is complementary to the development of financial institutions at the country level.
Previous empirical financial studies have paid little attention to the role of diversification strategy on financial choices. This study analyses the financing strategies of multibusiness firms, suggesting the relevance of sorting the diversification phenomena into its related and unrelated components. The implications of our findings are important because they explain earlier contradictory results on capital-structure determinants and offer an explanation of how the degree of product specialization/diversification and the direction of diversification (related or unrelated) translate into different corporate financial behaviours. Copyright (c) The Authors. Journal compilation (c) 2009 AFAANZ.
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