Abstract

Are the structural policy reforms effective in reducing debt financing constraints on formal sector enterprises in sub-Saharan Africa? We do not know. And the reason is the relatively limited research on the effectiveness of policies in the credit market. Using policy variables from the World Bank and the Enterprise Surveys data, the analysis involves three-way error component models. The results are indicative that taken together; structural policy reforms reduce debt financing constraints, at least, as it pertains to working capital needs. There is heterogeneity in the results. Changes in the business regulatory environment benefit large firms more than small ones. Financial sector reforms affect enterprises of all sizes relatively equally. For all the twelve countries, together, trade sector reforms initially increase the likelihood of access to debt finance by 20 percent until a policy threshold, beyond which progressive reforms in the trade sector reduce the probability by as much as 13 percent. Also, not all countries experience the same effects from trade sector reforms. The result is robust to different indicators of credit constraint and measures of structural reforms. The results have implications on the World Bank's push towards reforms on trade policy across countries.

Highlights

  • Are the structural policy reforms effective in reducing debt financing constraints on formal sector enterprises in sub-Saharan Africa? One would think that the answer to the question above is an obvious yes

  • After controlling for enterprise, country, and time effects, the results are indicative that taken together; structural policy reforms reduce debt financing constraints facing enterprises, at least, as it pertains to their working capital needs

  • Not all countries experience the same effects from trade sector reforms

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Are the structural policy reforms effective in reducing debt financing constraints on formal sector enterprises in sub-Saharan Africa? One would think that the answer to the question above is an obvious yes. Are the structural policy reforms effective in reducing debt financing constraints on formal sector enterprises in sub-Saharan Africa? The structural policy variable is an index consisting of trade, financial sector reforms, and the business regulatory environment. After controlling for enterprise, country, and time effects, the results are indicative that taken together; structural policy reforms reduce debt financing constraints facing enterprises, at least, as it pertains to their working capital needs. Improvements in the score on trade sector reforms have adverse effects on the probability of access to debt finance by enterprises in Angola and Democratic Republic of Congo, for instance. The present study is one of the few Prosper Senyo Koto studies to examine empirically, the impact of financial sector reforms in the credit market It builds on and extends an earlier study by Kuntchev et al (2014). Kuntchev et al (2014) use cross-sectional data while the current study uses panel data

LITERATURE REVIEW
Identification Strategy
RESULTS
C Figure 6: Panel A
ROBUSTNESS CHECKS
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
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