Ayyagari, MeghanaDemirguc-Kunt, AsliMaksimovic, Vojislav2012-03-302012-03-302010Review of Financial Studies08939454https://hdl.handle.net/10986/4818The fast growth of Chinese private sector firms is taken as evidence that informal finance can facilitate firm growth better than formal banks in developing countries. We examine firm financing patterns and growth using a database of twenty-four hundred Chinese firms. While a relatively small percentage of firms utilize bank loans, bank financing is associated with faster growth whereas informal financing is not. Controlling for selection, we find that firms with bank financing grow faster than similar firms without bank financing and that our results are not driven by bank corruption or the selection of firms that have accessed the formal financial system. Our findings question whether reputation and relationship-based financing are responsible for the performance of the fastest-growing firms in developing countries.ENBanksOther Depository InstitutionsMicro Finance InstitutionsMortgages G210Financing PolicyFinancial Risk and Risk ManagementCapital and Ownership Structure G320Firm Performance: Size, Diversification, and Scope L250Economic Development: Financial MarketsSaving and Capital InvestmentCorporate Finance and Governance O160Socialist Institutions and Their Transitions: Financial Economics P340Formal Versus Informal Finance : Evidence from ChinaReview of Financial StudiesJournal ArticleWorld Bank