Capital Structure and Contract Enforcement 9n is8
This paper studies how the degree of contract enforcement in a country influences firms' capital structures. We first document the capital structure for a new dataset of firms in two countries, Ecuador and the UK, that feature different degree of contract enforcement. We find that capital structure is different in these two countries in terms of mean leverage and the leverage size relation. In Ecuador leverage ratios are lower and smaller firms have smaller leverage ratios than large firms. In the UK leverage ratios are higher and bigger firms have smaller leverage ratios. We build a model of heterogeneous firms in an environment with lack of enforcement in debt contracts that delivers the observed capital structure in the data. In the model, the degree of contract enforcement acts like a tax or subsidy on the amount of borrowing for all firms. Weak contract enforcement corresponds to a tax that limits loans for all firms but hurts small firms more because their firm value relative to the tax is smaller and thus debt financing is more constrained. Strong contract enforcement corresponds to a subsidy on all firms that enables them to issue more debt but also helps disproportionately small firms given that the subsidy relative to their value is large. We quantify our mechanisms by calibrating our model to the firm datasets in the two countries and find that different degrees of enforcement can provide a unified rational for the differential capital structure observed in the data. OK v2..8
How does the capital structure of firms differ across countries? We document the relation between firm size and leverage for two new comprehensive datasets of firms in two countries: Ecuador and the UK. We find that leverage, defined as the ratio of liabilities relative to as-sets, is on average higher in firms in the UK relative to firms in Ecuador. We also find that the relation between firm size and leverage ratios differ across the two countries. In the UK small firms tend to have larger leverage ratios than large firms. In contrast, small firms in Ecuador have smaller leverage ratios relative to larger firms inside the country. We also document the relation between growth and size. We find that on average firms’ sales in Ecuador grow faster than sales from firms in the UK. However both countries feature the common size-growth relation: small firms grow faster than large firms conditional on survival.1 We choose these countries due to availability of data and because we want to contrast the firms’ capital structure and dynamics in economies with different degree of contract enforcement. p>eYi \'
This paper builds a model of heterogeneous firms to study the link between enforcement in financial contracts and firms’ capital structure. In particular we study how lack of enforcement in debt contracts and incomplete markets can provide a rational for the facts regarding leverage, growth and size across countries. In the model, the degree of contract enforcement acts like a tax or subsidy on the amount of borrowing for all firms. Weak contract enforcement corresponds to a tax that limits loans for all firms but hurts small firms more because their firm value relative to the tax is smaller and thus debt financing is more constrained. Strong contract enforcement corresponds to a subsidy on all firms that enables them to issue more debt but also helps disproportionately small firms given that the subsidy relative to their value is large. We quantify both mechanisms by calibrating our model to Ecuador and the UK and find that our model provides a unified rational for the relation between leverage, growth and size that is dependent on the degree of contract enforcement. ^~N:lW#=
The framework is a dynamic model of heterogeneous firms similar to Albuquerque and Hopenhayn (2004) but with incomplete markets. Firms in the model borrow from foreign investors to finance the working capital and set up costs needed for production. Firms’ productivity consists of two components: a permanent component and an i.i.d. component. We assume that firms sign contracts with investors to finance working capital before their i.i.d. shock is known and that these contracts cannot be contingent on the shock realization. After observing their shock firms can choose to repay the capital borrowed and the debt due and remain in operation for the next period, or default and get a default value. Incentives to repay debt depend crucially on the value of keeping the firm in operation at every period relative to the value of default. bM"?^\a&Q