Does Distance Still Matter? The Information Revolution in Small Business Lending
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Abstract
The distance between small firms and their lenders is increasing, and they are communicating in more impersonal ways. After documenting these systematic changes, we demonstrate they do not arise from small firms locating differently, consolidation in the banking industry, or biases in the sample. Instead, improvements in lender productivity appear to explain our findings. We also find distant firms no longer have to be the highest quality credits, indicating they have greater access to credit. The evidence indicates there has been substantial development of the financial sector, even in areas such as small business lending.
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The record
- Venue
- The Journal of Finance
- Topic
- Banking stability, regulation, efficiency
- Field
- Economics, Econometrics and Finance
- Canadian institutions
- Kellogg's (Canada)
- Funders
- —
- Keywords
- Consolidation (business)BusinessSmall businessSample (material)ProductivityQuality (philosophy)Large sampleMonetary economicsFinancial systemFinanceEconomicsEconomic growth
- Has abstract in OpenAlex
- yes