Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging market

This study analyzes the impact of air pollution on the city in which customers are located on the trade credit strategy of their suppliers. Following the framework of environmental stress theory, we hypothesize that suppliers change their trade credit strategy to grant less trade credit to their cus...

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Main Authors: Jianhua Tan, Xuehui Zhang, Peng Zhang, Kam C. Chan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-08-01
Series:Borsa Istanbul Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214845021000302
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spelling doaj-9bd4e3439a5d49a29b81c1c71f7632f02021-07-25T04:43:27ZengElsevierBorsa Istanbul Review2214-84502021-08-0121S70S79Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging marketJianhua Tan0Xuehui Zhang1Peng Zhang2Kam C. Chan3School of Government Audit, Nanjing Audit University, Nanjing, ChinaSchool of Economics and Management, Inner Mongolia University of Technology, Huhhot, ChinaSchool of Accounting, Hubei University of Economics, Wuhan, China; Corresponding author.School of Accounting, Zhongnan University of Economics and Law, Wuhan, ChinaThis study analyzes the impact of air pollution on the city in which customers are located on the trade credit strategy of their suppliers. Following the framework of environmental stress theory, we hypothesize that suppliers change their trade credit strategy to grant less trade credit to their customers located in cities with severe air pollution. Our findings are consistent with our hypothesis. We find that the adverse effects of air pollution occur through financial constraints, operating risk, and customers' default risk, corroborating the underlying logic of our proposed hypothesis. Additional analyses suggest that changes in a supplier's trade credit are more pronounced when a customer is in a polluting industry, has low total factor productivity, receives fewer government subsidies, has fewer bank loans, is far from its suppliers, and has poor inventory management.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214845021000302Air pollutionEnvironmental stress theoryTrade credit strategy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jianhua Tan
Xuehui Zhang
Peng Zhang
Kam C. Chan
spellingShingle Jianhua Tan
Xuehui Zhang
Peng Zhang
Kam C. Chan
Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging market
Borsa Istanbul Review
Air pollution
Environmental stress theory
Trade credit strategy
author_facet Jianhua Tan
Xuehui Zhang
Peng Zhang
Kam C. Chan
author_sort Jianhua Tan
title Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging market
title_short Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging market
title_full Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging market
title_fullStr Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging market
title_full_unstemmed Does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? Evidence from an emerging market
title_sort does air pollution matter in a supplier's trade credit strategy? evidence from an emerging market
publisher Elsevier
series Borsa Istanbul Review
issn 2214-8450
publishDate 2021-08-01
description This study analyzes the impact of air pollution on the city in which customers are located on the trade credit strategy of their suppliers. Following the framework of environmental stress theory, we hypothesize that suppliers change their trade credit strategy to grant less trade credit to their customers located in cities with severe air pollution. Our findings are consistent with our hypothesis. We find that the adverse effects of air pollution occur through financial constraints, operating risk, and customers' default risk, corroborating the underlying logic of our proposed hypothesis. Additional analyses suggest that changes in a supplier's trade credit are more pronounced when a customer is in a polluting industry, has low total factor productivity, receives fewer government subsidies, has fewer bank loans, is far from its suppliers, and has poor inventory management.
topic Air pollution
Environmental stress theory
Trade credit strategy
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214845021000302
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AT pengzhang doesairpollutionmatterinasupplierstradecreditstrategyevidencefromanemergingmarket
AT kamcchan doesairpollutionmatterinasupplierstradecreditstrategyevidencefromanemergingmarket
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