Political Uncertainty, State Ownership, and Credit Reallocation: Evidence from the Chinese Anti-corruption Campaign
Topic: |
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Date: |
27/02/2017 |
Time: |
10:30-12:00am |
Venue: |
Room 502, Daoyuan Building, CUHK (SZ) |
Speaker: |
Bo Li PBC School of Finance, Tsinghua University |
Detail/ Abstract: |
We find that the anti-corruption investigations in China lead to increases in debt issuances for privately- owned, non-SOE peer firms. Our findings suggest that the industry-specific competition effect dominates the contagion effect for non-SOE peers. In contrast, SOE peers experience reductions in debt issuances following anti-corruption investigations. This credit reallocation is associated with higher investment efficiency, suggesting that non-SOE rivals with high productivity benefit from SOE rivals’ potential loss of political connection. This credit shift towards non-SOE firms is more pronounced in short-term debt and bank loans, indicating a supply-side explanation that we corroborate using an exogenous shock in the banking sector. |