To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’
There is tremendous interest, in the economic literature, for the determinants of firms’ capital structure decisions. A rich body of empirical works now exists that purports to identify firm- and country-level factors affecting firms’ financing patterns. In addition, more recentl...
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doaj-77d7f92570b84f0c8feaf77bcda1a4792020-11-25T00:05:31ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Financial Studies2227-70722019-01-0171310.3390/ijfs7010003ijfs7010003To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’Olivier Butzbach0Domenico Sarno1Department of Political Science, University of Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, 81100 Caserta, ItalyDepartment of Political Science, University of Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, 81100 Caserta, ItalyThere is tremendous interest, in the economic literature, for the determinants of firms’ capital structure decisions. A rich body of empirical works now exists that purports to identify firm- and country-level factors affecting firms’ financing patterns. In addition, more recently, a new stream of studies has emerged that investigates cross-regional variation in small firms’ capital structure. While small firms’ leverage does seem to vary across regions, at least in countries where significant regional differences in economic and financial development and in the quality of institutions exist, not much yet is known about variation in debt maturity, in debt in relation to equity, and between different types of small firms. The present paper aims to fill this gap through an empirical analysis of cross-regional variation in the capital structure of a sample of about 30,000 Italian small firms over a 13-year period, including the aftermath of the credit crunch that followed the 2007–2008 global financial crisis. The findings confirm the view that small firms in underdeveloped regions are more financially constrained, but also amend some of the results shown in the literature, in particular by showing how small firms in Italy’s Southern regions have higher levels of equity and fixed assets than small firms in other regions.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/7/1/3capital structureleverageSMEscross-regional variation |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Olivier Butzbach Domenico Sarno |
spellingShingle |
Olivier Butzbach Domenico Sarno To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’ International Journal of Financial Studies capital structure leverage SMEs cross-regional variation |
author_facet |
Olivier Butzbach Domenico Sarno |
author_sort |
Olivier Butzbach |
title |
To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’ |
title_short |
To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’ |
title_full |
To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’ |
title_fullStr |
To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’ |
title_full_unstemmed |
To What Extent Do Regional Effects Influence Firms’ Capital Structure? The Case of Southern Italian SMEs’ |
title_sort |
to what extent do regional effects influence firms’ capital structure? the case of southern italian smes’ |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
International Journal of Financial Studies |
issn |
2227-7072 |
publishDate |
2019-01-01 |
description |
There is tremendous interest, in the economic literature, for the determinants of firms’ capital structure decisions. A rich body of empirical works now exists that purports to identify firm- and country-level factors affecting firms’ financing patterns. In addition, more recently, a new stream of studies has emerged that investigates cross-regional variation in small firms’ capital structure. While small firms’ leverage does seem to vary across regions, at least in countries where significant regional differences in economic and financial development and in the quality of institutions exist, not much yet is known about variation in debt maturity, in debt in relation to equity, and between different types of small firms. The present paper aims to fill this gap through an empirical analysis of cross-regional variation in the capital structure of a sample of about 30,000 Italian small firms over a 13-year period, including the aftermath of the credit crunch that followed the 2007–2008 global financial crisis. The findings confirm the view that small firms in underdeveloped regions are more financially constrained, but also amend some of the results shown in the literature, in particular by showing how small firms in Italy’s Southern regions have higher levels of equity and fixed assets than small firms in other regions. |
topic |
capital structure leverage SMEs cross-regional variation |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/7/1/3 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT olivierbutzbach towhatextentdoregionaleffectsinfluencefirmscapitalstructurethecaseofsouthernitaliansmes AT domenicosarno towhatextentdoregionaleffectsinfluencefirmscapitalstructurethecaseofsouthernitaliansmes |
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