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Gender and the credit rationing of small businesses

Gender and the credit rationing of small businesses AbstractRapid small business ownership growth rates among women have motivated research on issues related to gender and small business performance. The importance of credit access for the success of small businesses, as well as evidence that women have less access to credit than male business owners, has led researchers to explore the reasons for this. In this paper, we estimate a model of credit rationing by gender of the business owner. Our results are consistent with previous studies that find higher loan denial rates and lower loan application rates among women compared with men. Testing the robustness of the results we find that women seem to be rationing themselves in the credit market rather than being discriminated against by banks. Reasons for this self-rationing http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Social Science Journal Taylor & Francis

Gender and the credit rationing of small businesses

Social Science Journal , Volume 50 (1): 11 – Mar 1, 2013

Gender and the credit rationing of small businesses

Social Science Journal , Volume 50 (1): 11 – Mar 1, 2013

Abstract

AbstractRapid small business ownership growth rates among women have motivated research on issues related to gender and small business performance. The importance of credit access for the success of small businesses, as well as evidence that women have less access to credit than male business owners, has led researchers to explore the reasons for this. In this paper, we estimate a model of credit rationing by gender of the business owner. Our results are consistent with previous studies that find higher loan denial rates and lower loan application rates among women compared with men. Testing the robustness of the results we find that women seem to be rationing themselves in the credit market rather than being discriminated against by banks. Reasons for this self-rationing

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References (55)

Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2012 Western Social Science Association
ISSN
1873-5355
eISSN
0362-3319
DOI
10.1016/j.soscij.2012.09.002
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

AbstractRapid small business ownership growth rates among women have motivated research on issues related to gender and small business performance. The importance of credit access for the success of small businesses, as well as evidence that women have less access to credit than male business owners, has led researchers to explore the reasons for this. In this paper, we estimate a model of credit rationing by gender of the business owner. Our results are consistent with previous studies that find higher loan denial rates and lower loan application rates among women compared with men. Testing the robustness of the results we find that women seem to be rationing themselves in the credit market rather than being discriminated against by banks. Reasons for this self-rationing

Journal

Social Science JournalTaylor & Francis

Published: Mar 1, 2013

Keywords: J16, G21, L26

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