Substitution of trade credit for bank credit: empirical study of financing behaviour of Indian
The hypothesis that companies substitute trade credit for bank credit during period of restricted monetary policy has been subject of empirical investigation for the reasons that it helps us to understand the linkages between the financial sector and real sector of economy. This paper examines whether companies in India substitute trade credit for bank credit during restricted monetary policy years. Using panel data econometric method the study uses time-series cross-section company level data of 828 manufacturing companies covering period from 1990 to 2001. The findings suggest that the magnitude of substitution of trade credit for bank credit is statistically significant during the monetary restrictive years. These results assume significance as about 40 per cent and 30 per cent of current assts constitute the trade credit and bank credit respectively. Both these put together is about 35 per cent of total asset of sample companies in India. The results also suggest that magnitude of substitution vary depending on the size of company.
Authors: | Ramesh, Bhat |
---|---|
Institutions: | Economics, Indian Institute of Management |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Ramesh, Bhat,
-
Market-Wide Commonalities in Corporate Earnings and Significance Tests of Accounting Beta
Ramesh, Bhat,
-
Public-Private Partnership in Health Sector: Issues and Prospects
Ramesh, Bhat,
- More ...