Discussion paper

DP12006 Suitable or non-suitable? An investigation of Eurozone SME access to market-based finance

The present paper provides in–depth analysis of SME access to capital markets among Eurozone countries. First, we detect the factors – at the firm and country level – that are able to influence the likelihood of SME access to market-based finance. Second, we construct an index of what we call “market suitability”, i.e., a score that can be measured at the dimensional, sectoral and national level, which provides the percentage of firms potentially fit for market-based finance. Our results highlight that a few Eurozone countries seem to have deployed the “potential” for capital market financing, while there exists a large percentage of unexploited potential for firms fit for market-based finance. It should also be highlighted that overall business conditions - measured by GDP growth, the degree of development of domestic financial markets, and the quality of the legal and judicial enforcement system - greatly influence a firm’s market suitability. In the period under consideration (2000-2014), macro factors tended to reduce the likelihood of SME access to market-based finance in most countries in our sample

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Citation

Rossi, E, P Bongini, A Ferrando and M Rossolini (2017), ‘DP12006 Suitable or non-suitable? An investigation of Eurozone SME access to market-based finance‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 12006. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp12006