The Effect of Personal Financing Disruptions on Entrepreneurship
Abstract
This paper studies how disruptions to personal sources of financing, aside from commercial lending supply shocks, impair the survival and growth of small businesses. Entrepreneurs holding deposit accounts at retail banking institutions that defaulted following the financial crisis reduce personal borrowing and are consequently more likely to exit their firm. Exposure to corresponding investment losses from delisted publicly traded bank stocks strongly reduces the rate of firm survival, particularly for early-stage ventures. At the intensive margin, owners who remain in business reduce employees after personal wealth losses. My results suggest that personal finance is an important component of firm financing.
Research Area
Household Finance
Corporate Finance
Corporate Finance
Keywords
entrepreneurship, small business, personal finance, financial crisis, bank defaults
JEL Classification
L26, D14, G01, G11, G21, G33
Research Data
Topic
Household Finance
Corporate Finance
Stability and Regulation
Corporate Finance
Stability and Regulation
Relations
1
Publication Type
Working Paper
Link to Publication
Collections
- LIF-SAFE Working Papers [334]