scholarly journals THE SUBSTITUTION FINANCING EFFECT OF SUPPLIERS’ TRADE CREDIT ON CUSTOMERS’ TRADE CREDIT IN CHINA

2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (6) ◽  
pp. 1456-1475
Author(s):  
Chun Guo ◽  
Wunhong Su ◽  
Xiaobao Song

This study investigates the substitution financing effect of suppliers’ trade credit on customers’ trade-credit using Chinese listed firms from 2009 to 2018. Results verify the substitution financing effect of suppliers’ trade credit on customers’ trade credit, indicating that firms with higher suppliers’ trade credit have lower customers’ trade credit. Moreover, suppliers’ trade-credit substitutes customers’ trade credit by alleviating financing constraints. Customer concentration weakens the substitution financing relation. Finally, the substitution financing effect of customers’ trade credit on bank credit is more pronounced than that of suppliers’ trade credit. As exogenous policy shock, the capital market liberalization has no significant impact on the substitution financing relation between heterogeneous trade credits. This study reveals that trade credit is heterogeneous rather than homogeneous. The substitution financing effect also exists in trade credit inside, which expands the existing literature’s understanding of trade credit and the substitution financing theory’s connotation.

2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xian Chen ◽  
Jakob Arnoldi ◽  
Xin Chen

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate how cultural value in materialism affects corporate supply of trade credits. Design/methodology/approach Using a sample of 14,710 firm-year observations of Chinese listed firms from 1998 to 2012, the authors examine the influence of regional materialism on accounts receivable. Findings The authors find that listed firms within more materialistic tend to extend less trade credit to their customers, in particular in long-term categories of trade credit. Such negative effects can be significantly mitigated by state control, suggesting the effects are more pronounced in privately controlled listed firms. The negative effects of materialism still hold after controlling for other regional factors, such as trust, GDP per capita or institutional development. Research limitations/implications The authors show materialism as a cultural construct varies across Chinese regions, and it could have important impact on corporate supply of trade credits, besides the previous found effects on consumer use of credit. Originality/value This paper expands the literature about the influence of materialism on economic decision making from the individual level to the corporate level.


2014 ◽  
Vol 687-691 ◽  
pp. 4794-4798
Author(s):  
Dan Wu ◽  
Yan Luo

The paper, sampling the data from A-shares listed companies of electrical energy during the period of 2009 to 2012, checks out the influence of the enterprise’s market power on its capacity for trade credit and bank credit financing. The paper tries to find out the internal relationship among them by building linear regression models of the explained variable, Credit, the explaining variable, MP, and the control variables, SIZE, EBIT, LIQ, CFO, SBA and SBA*MP. In the study, we find that the target customers of trade credits and bank loans are almost enterprises with a high market power.


2006 ◽  
pp. 167-187
Author(s):  
Joseph E. Stiglitz ◽  
José Antonio Ocampo ◽  
Shari Spiegel ◽  
Ricardo Ffrench-Davis ◽  
Deepak Nayyar

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