Publication:
Market Power and the Transmission of Loan Subsidies

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2019-07
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2019-08-01
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Abstract
This paper studies credit allocation when government loan programs are distributed by private banks. The study focuses on Brazil, where private lenders can operate in two credit markets: competitive loans with own funding and earmarked loans that rely on government funds to finance firms at below-the-market interest rates. Using rich loan-level data between 2005-2016, the paper finds that banks are disproportionately more likely to extend earmarked loans to larger firms and firms with an existing credit relationship. The paper further documents a cross-selling strategy whereby banks increase the price of free-market loans of riskier borrowers that also obtain earmarked credit. Inadvertently, the government selects winners and losers, since mostly larger businesses, those that bank with the largest private lenders, and those willing to bundle free-market and earmarked loans disproportionately access the program.
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Ornelas, Jose Renato Haas; Pedraza, Alvaro; Ruiz-Ortega, Claudia; Silva, Thiago Christiano. 2019. Market Power and the Transmission of Loan Subsidies. Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8952. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/32153 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.
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