Financial underdevelopment, distorted lending and export market survival
This paper examines the impact of financial development on exporter survival in foreign markets with Chinese firm-level data over the period 1998-2008. We measure financial development using the size, lending efficiency, term structure of bank loans and degree of state intervention in financial resource allocation, respectively. We find that a larger scale and greater efficiency of bank lending and less state intervention facilitate while the relative abundance of long-term credit deteriorates exporter survival. These effects are more pronounced for private exporters compared with state-owned exporters. For foreign-invested exporters, weakened state intervention is of relatively great importance. We attribute this disproportional impact to the government's intervention in funding investment and the distortional lending of banks, which varies across regions and industries with different levels of presence of state-owned enterprises.
    | Year of publication: | 
                              2014         | 
|---|---|
| Authors: | Deng, Ziliang ; Hou, Lei | 
| Published in: | 
                  	  	      	    The Journal of International Trade & Economic Development. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 0963-8199. - Vol. 23.2014, 5, p. 600-625      	   | 
| Publisher: | Taylor & Francis Journals | 
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