This Website has a limited use of cookies. By using this website, you are agreeing to the terms and conditions listed in our data protection policy. Read more

Working Paper No. 1305

Distance Still Matters: Local Bank Closures and Credit Availability

Working Paper
Reference
Kärnä, Anders, Agostino Manduchi and Andreas Stephan (2019). “Distance Still Matters: Local Bank Closures and Credit Availability”. IFN Working Paper No. 1305. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Authors
Anders Kärnä, Agostino Manduchi, Andreas Stephan

In recent years, commercial banks have substantially reduced the number of their branch offices. We address the question of whether or not the increased distance to lenders caused by branch office closures translates into a lower credit supply for small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs). We use a unique dataset based on 33,000 loan contracts from a state-owned Swedish bank designed to support credit-constrained SMEs, and relate loan size and the interest rate to the number of nearby commercial bank offices. We use an IV strategy to account for potential endogeneity of the number of banks in a region. In line with previous studies, we find that interest rates increase with distance, while loan size decreases with distance. Thus, a larger number of local bank offices increases the local credit supply, and thereby reduces credit constraints of nearby SMEs.