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Formal versus Informal Finance: Evidence from China

TLDR
In this paper, the authors take a closer look at firm financing patterns and growth using a database of 2,400 Chinese firms and find that a relatively small percentage of firms in the sample utilize formal bank finance with a much greater reliance on informal sources.
Abstract
China is often mentioned as a counter-example to the findings in the finance and growth literature since, despite the weaknesses in its banking system, it is one of the fastest growing economies in the world. The fast growth of Chinese private sector firms is taken as evidence that it is alternative financing and governance mechanisms that support China's growth. This paper takes a closer look at firm financing patterns and growth using a database of 2,400 Chinese firms. The authors find that a relatively small percentage of firms in the sample utilize formal bank finance with a much greater reliance on informal sources. However, the results suggest that despite its weaknesses, financing from the formal financial system is associated with faster firm growth, whereas fund raising from alternative channels is not. Using a selection model, the authors find no evidence that these results arise because of the selection of firms that have access to the formal financial system. Although firms report bank corruption, there is no evidence that it significantly affects the allocation of credit or the performance of firms that receive the credit. The findings suggest that the role of reputation and relationship based financing and governance mechanisms in financing the fastest growing firms in China is likely to be overestimated.

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Citations
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Government Ownership and the Cost of Debt for Chinese Listed Corporations

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the impact of government control on the cost of debt of Chinese listed corporations and found that, on average, corporations under government control have a lower cost compared to corporations under private control, regardless of firm level financial distress and excess shareholder control.
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Applicability of financial theories of capital structure to the Chinese cultural context: A study of privately owned SMEs:

TL;DR: This paper investigated the firm-level determinants of capital structure and tested them against the predictions of financial theory using a new dataset of 1539 Chinese small and medium-sized enterprises and found that firm size and profitability are both related to leverage as posited by pecking-order theory.
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Institutional Regime Shift in Intellectual Property Rights and Innovation Strategies of Firms in China

TL;DR: It is argued that to the extent that Chinese firms have been deeply embedded in China’s informal institutions, they are less responsive to formal institutional changes than Western firms operating in China.
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Family Firm Research – A Review

TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors reviewed family firm studies in the finance and accounting literature, primarily those conducted using data from the United States and China, and reviewed the evidence on the family firm premium, the manifestation of the agency conflict between majority and minority shareholders in family firms, earnings quality and corporate disclosure, and determinants of family ownership and control.
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Innovation and SME finance: Evidence from developing countries

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the relationship between firm-level innovation and external finance for small and medium enterprises (SMEs) and found a positive relationship between formal finance and product and process innovation for early-stage SMEs than for mature counterparts.
References
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Paul R. Rosenbaum, +1 more
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Finance and Growth: Schumpeter Might Be Right

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined a cross-section of about 80 countries for the period 1960-89 and found that various measures of financial development are strongly associated with both current and later rates of economic growth.
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Financial Intermediation and Delegated Monitoring

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a theory of financial intermediation based on minimizing the cost of monitoring information which is useful for resolving incentive problems between borrowers and lenders, and presented a characterization of the costs of providing incentives for delegated monitoring by a financial intermediary.
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Financial Dependence and Growth

TL;DR: This paper examined whether financial development facilitates economic growth by scrutinizing one rationale for such a relationship; that financial development reduces the costs of external finance to firms, and found that industrial sectors that are relatively more in need of foreign finance develop disproportionately faster in countries with more developed financial markets.
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