Abstract

Several new methods have been proposed for supply chain finance (SCF) with bank credits, but none of them mentions how to solve the borrowers' moral hazard problems in SCF. This paper examines the moral hazard problem in supply chain financing with procurement contract (or purchase order). We show that since supply chain is an up-down directed structure, when financing with the procurement contract, the supplier's effort monitoring task can be rendered to the procurement contract, which can secure the supplier's optimal effort and capital choices in production. Hence, compared to separate lending, the supplier's credit rationing problem can be mitigated, and most importantly, banks' under-estimation on the supplier's default risk and the over-estimation on the retailer's default risk will both decrease. We further show that the retailer's corporate social responsibility expenditure can increase consumers' brand recognition, thus when facing demand shocks arising from consumer's unexpected concerns, the retailer can better stabilize the firm value.

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