cover image: Crisis Credit, Employment Protection, Indebtedness, and Risk

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Crisis Credit, Employment Protection, Indebtedness, and Risk

25 Oct 2024

This paper studies how credit guarantee and employment protection programs interact in assisting firms during crises times. The paper analyzes how these government programs influence credit allocation, indebtedness, and risk at both the micro and macro levels. The programs provide different incentives for firms. The low interest rate encourages riskier firms to demand government-backed credit, while banks tend to reject those credit applications. The credit demand outweighs this screening supply response, expanding micro-level indebtedness across the extensive and intensive margins among riskier firms. The uptake of the employment program is not associated with risk, as firms internalize the opportunity cost of reduced operations when sending workers home to qualify for assistance. The employment program mitigates the indebtedness expansion of the credit program by supporting firms and enabling banks to screen firms better. Macroeconomic risk of the credit program would increase by a third without the availability of the employment program.
covid-19 banking debt credit demand employment protection sdg 16 credit supply crises macroeconomic risk finance and financial sector development::finance and development finance and financial sector development::banks & banking reform peace, justice and strong institutions sdg 8 decent work and economic growth governance::governance and the financial sector firm risk public credit guarantees

Authors

Huneeus, Federico, Kaboski, Joseph P., Larrain, Mauricio, Schmukler, Sergio L., Vera, Mario

Citation
“ Huneeus, Federico ; Kaboski, Joseph P. ; Larrain, Mauricio ; Schmukler, Sergio L. ; Vera, Mario . 2024 . Crisis Credit, Employment Protection, Indebtedness, and Risk . Policy Research Working Paper; 10958 . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/42301 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO . ”
Collection(s)
Policy Research Working Papers
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10958
Identifier externaldocumentum
34411082
Identifier internaldocumentum
34411082
Pages
70
Published in
United States of America
RelationisPartofseries
Policy Research Working Paper; 10958
Report
WPS10958
Rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
Rights Holder
World Bank
Rights URI
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
UNIT
DCRCL
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42301
date disclosure
2024-10-25
region geographical
World

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