Paper

Quality of Institutions, Credit Markets and Bankruptcy

Bankruptcy and its effect on the economic equilibrium
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This paper begins with an observation of the economic equilibrium following firm bankruptcies in Western and Eastern Europe. In an attempt to explain the observations, this paper poses two questions:

  • How do institutions influence the incentive of creditors to liquidate defaulting debtors?
  • Which are the institutions that matter for this decision?

The paper analyzes the effects of bankruptcy by setting up a bank-firm relationship model to understand the incentive of a bank to liquidate its defaulting customers. It studies:

  • Interdependence between law and finance;
  • Creditor passivity;
  • Information exchange through credit bureaus.

The paper is organized in three sections:

  • The first section develops a credit market game and studies the impact of corporate bankruptcy on interest rates; it explains the credit model and contract, and establishes that the size of the rent depends on the adverse selection between banks;
  • The next section analyzes the bank's incentive to liquidate a defaulting borrower; it presents three propositions that assess various scenarios effecting banks decision to liquidate firms;
  • The concluding part states that bankruptcy decisions can be made more efficient by improving institutions and reducing the adverse selection problem; institutions can be improved by bettering the legal framework, while the adverse selection problem can be mitigated by:
    • Increasing credit access to firms that have not had access to finance in the past;
    • Improving screening skills of the bank staff;
    • Fostering bank competition in the market.

About this Publication

By Hainz, C.
Published