Not logged in.

Contribution Details

Type Journal Article
Scope Discipline-based scholarship
Title Who needs credit and who gets credit in Eastern Europe?
Organization Unit
Authors
  • Martin Brown
  • Steven Ongena
  • Alexander Popov
  • Pinar Yeşin
Item Subtype Original Work
Refereed Yes
Status Published in final form
Language
  • English
Journal Title Economic Policy
Publisher Oxford University Press
Geographical Reach international
ISSN 0266-4658
Volume 26
Number 65
Page Range 93 - 130
Date 2011
Abstract Text Based on survey data covering 8,387 firms in 20 countries we compare the access to bank credit for firms in Eastern Europe to that in selected Western European countries. Our analysis reveals five main results. First, the firm-level determinants of the propensity to apply are similar in Eastern and Western Europe: small and financially opaque firms as well as firms with alternative financing sources are less likely to apply for credit while firms with greater financing needs (exporters) are more likely to apply. The lower rate of loan applications by firms in Eastern Europe compared to Western Europe seems to be partly driven by the stronger presence of foreign banks and the lower level of credit information sharing. Second, while those firms which do apply for credit are rarely denied credit, foreign bank presence is associated with higher loan rejection rates among small firms. The high loan approval rates observed in Eastern and Western Europe result partly from a selection effect: those firms which are more likely to have an application rejected are less likely to apply in the first place. We find evidence that foreign bank presence is associated with higher loan rejection rates among small and government-owned firms. Third, the reasons why firms do not apply for loans differ strongly between the two regions. In Eastern Europe a higher fraction of non-applicants seem to be discouraged by lending conditions, that is, high interest rates and tough collateral requirements, while in Western Europe more firms simply do not need loans. Fourth, credit constraints in Eastern Europe softened in recent years. Firms which were discouraged from applying for credit or denied credit in 2005 were more likely to have a loan in 2008 than to still be credit constrained, especially in countries with better credit information sharing. Finally, credit constraints do affect firm performance in Eastern Europe. In particular, firms which are denied credit or discouraged from applying are less likely to invest in R&D and introduce new products.
Free access at Related URL
Related URLs
Digital Object Identifier 10.1111/j.1468-0327.2010.00259.x
Other Identification Number merlin-id:11781
Export BibTeX
EP3 XML (ZORA)