Liquidity constraints, spillovers, and entrepreneurship: evidence from a cash transfer program

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 12-2020
Journal Small Business Economics
Volume | Issue number 55 | 4
Pages (from-to) 1131–1158
Number of pages 28
Organisations
  • Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB) - Amsterdam Business School Research Institute (ABS-RI)
  • Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB)
Abstract
This paper exploits a liquidity shock from a welfare program in Brazil to investigate the role of financial constraints, in opposition to general equilibrium mechanisms, in explaining entrepreneurship. Previous research focuses exclusively on how liquidity changes recipients’ behavior through direct effects on reducing constraints. However, liquidity shocks may also produce spillovers from recipients to others and thereby indirectly affect entrepreneurial decisions. This paper presents a method for decomposing the liquidity shock into direct effects associated with relieving individual constraints, and indirect effects associated with spillovers to other individuals. Results suggest that the program, which assists 20 percent of Brazilian households, increased the number of small entrepreneurs by 10 percent. However, this increase is entirely driven by the indirect effect. Further tests suggest that this effect is associated with an increase in private transfers between households. Thus, entrepreneurship tends to respond more to the interaction between households than to financial constraints.
Document type Article
Note With Supplementary file
Language English
Related publication Liquidity Constraints, Informal Financing, and Entrepreneurship
Published at https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-019-00178-1
Downloads
s11187-019-00178-1 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
Permalink to this page
Back