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Journal Article
Court Enforcement, Bank Loans and Firm Investment: Evidence from a Bankruptcy Reform in Brazil
The Quarterly Journal of Economics
Author(s)
We exploit variation in the congestion of civil courts across Brazilian municipalities,
together with a bankruptcy reform increasing secured creditors’ protection, to estimate the
effect of enforcement on firm access to finance, investment and size. We find that firms operating
in municipalities with less congested courts experienced larger increase in the use of secured
loans, as well as a larger increase in investment and value of output in the years after the
reform. To establish the direction of causality, we use an instrumental variable strategy that
exploits Brazilian state laws on judicial organization, and focus on differences in court
congestion across otherwise similar neighboring municipalities located across judicial district
borders within the same state. Together, the evidence indicates that differences in court enforcement affect the impact of financial reform on firm access to finance, investment
and size.
Date Published:
2016
Citations:
Alencar, Leonardo, Jacopo Ponticelli. 2016. Court Enforcement, Bank Loans and Firm Investment: Evidence from a Bankruptcy Reform in Brazil. The Quarterly Journal of Economics. (3)1365-1413.