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Informal finance is often believed to be expensive and in limited supply. But most informal investors -- family and friends -- offer funds cheaply; and yet, borrowers seem to prefer formal finance. We explain this in a model of external finance that assumes social preferences between family and friends.
Social preferences make informal finance cheap, but amplify the entrepreneur's aversion to failure, dissuading risk taking and stifling investment demand. Even counterparties with social ties can therefore benefit from formal contracts. This is pertinent to the limited success of group-based microfinance in generating entrepreneurial growth, and to the emergence of social lending intermediaries.
In this paper, we investigate whether reform of EU company law is needed to make corporate governance more sustainable through an analysis of some of the...
We use new data that measure forward-looking physical climate risk at the firm level to examine the impact of climate risk on capital structure. We find...