Box 4.6 Use of Research-Based Micromodels—Liquidity Constraints in Capital Formation
Several research-based exercises carried out as back-
ground for recent financial sector assessment pro-
grams (FSAPs) have assessed financing conditions
using firm-level data for nonfinancial firms. In a world
without financially constrained firms, investment and
financing decisions are independent from each other.
However, the investment decisions of financially
constrained firms often depend on the availability of
cash flow (compare to Fazzari, Hubbard, and Petersen
1988).
For the recent Mexican FSAP accounting data for
73 nonfinancial-listed Mexican firms were drawn from
WorldScope, a commercial data provider. The exer-
cise estimated the extent to which firm investment
depended on cash flow rather than on the marginal
profitability of capital. Although WorldScope tends
to include only larger firms, it may be assumed that
smaller firms are at least as financially constrained.
Regressing investment ratios on marginal profit-
ability, financial leverage, and cash flow found cash
flow to be a statistically significant variable, which
can be evidence of Mexican firms being cash-flow
constrained. In principle—given sufficient data—the
exercise could be divided by class, size, or geographi-
cal region of firm.
A similar exercise carried out for the Czech FSAP
found that firms operating in the utilities, construc-
tion, and trading industries invested significantly
more than other nonfinancial firms. If the firms are
listed and the stock market is sufficiently liquid, mar-
ginal accounting profitability can be substituted by
Tobin’s q-ratio. These kinds of data can throw addi-
tional light on firms’ financing characteristics. For
instance in the Czech FSAP, it was found that trade
credit was generally not used as a financing source
for investment and that firms that were able to
attract new bank loans used them, to a large extent,
for purposes other than investment, for example,
to repay old loans. The results suggested that the
general reduction in the supply of bank credit during
1999 may have increased the financing constraints
of firms, especially those of small and highly lever-
aged firms.
Sources: Financial System Stability Assessments (FSSAs) for Czech Republic and Mexico, respectively.
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