Blue-Collar Crime and Finance

Peer Reviewed icon Peer Reviewed
Author
Cumming, Douglas ;
Olid, Christian
Date issued
February 2022
Subject
Finance;
Small Business;
Crime and Violence;
Interest Rate;
Bank Loan;
Saving and Loan;
Labor Force;
Economy
JEL code
G21 - Banks • Depository Institutions • Micro Finance Institutions • Mortgages;
K14 - Criminal Law
Country
Trinidad and Tobago;
Jamaica;
Guyana;
Bahamas;
Barbados;
Suriname
Category
Working Papers
Relatively little is known about the effects of blue-collar crime (theft, robbery, vandalism or arson) on financial decisions. Previous literature has focused its attention either on 'regional' crime rates or the 'perception' of crime as business obstacles. Instead, we examine financing terms of 'individual' firms that 'effectively' experimented blue-collar crime events. We show that blue-collar crime worsens the access and conditions to external financing, which is unexpected since firms do not have to reveal to lenders that they suffered such crime incidents. We also find evidence that firm-information leakages may explain the negative effects of blue-collar crime on financing terms.
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