www.esri.ie @ESRIDublin #ESRIevents #ESRIpublications @ESRIDublin #ESRIevents #ESRIpublications www.esri.ie Measuring the Investment Gap and its Financing Requirements for Irish SMEs DATE 08/03/2018 VENUE DoF Conference AUTHORS Conor O’Toole, Martina Lawless, Rachel Slaymaker This research is being completed under the joint ESRI/Department of Finance research programme on Banking.
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Measuring the Investment Gap and its Financing ...
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growth, exporting, profitability, local economic conditions (NUTS3 level unemployment rates), time factors
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Estimates of the Gap
Actual Average Investment and Model Prediction
Investment Gap (Actual – Predicted)
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Methodologies to Estimate the Impact of Financial Market Imperfections
Key Question – To what extent are financial market imperfections impacting investment gap?
• Use three different methods to assess
Method Overview Description
Method 1 Model Based Append financial factors to baseline specification and
compare difference in predicted values
Method 2 EIF Ex Ante
Guidelines
Apply the loan-financing gap estimation methodology
from the EIF Ex-Ante Guidelines
Method 3 External Financing
Shares
Use the share of investment funding by external finance
from other countries or historical data for Ireland
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Model Based Financial Factors
Factor Financial Channel Measurement Intuition
Interest rate Cost of financing Higher interest rates should lower investment
Credit access Applications for
finance and their
success
We split the sample into borrowers who had
successfully applied for credit, rejected borrowers,
discouraged borrowers and those that did not apply.
Investment should be higher for successful applicants.
Lending conditions Access to, demand
for, finance
We include a variable for whether or not firms believe
the banks are lending. If this lowers credit demand, it
should have a negative association with investment.
No collateral
posted
Access to finance We distinguish between those firms who applied for
financing and posted specific collateral and all other
firms as a proxy for the collateral channel.
Debt to turnover
ratio
Debt overhang This indicator reflects the degree to which debt
sustainability impacts investment.
Total debt Indebtedness This measure of free collateral can capture the extent
to which firms can provide collateral to access external
financing.
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Summary of Financial Frictions Shares
2014 2015 2016
Method 1: Model Based Median (Preferred) 9% 10% 17%
Method 2: EIF Method 17% 15% 18%
Method 3a: External Financing Share - EU 12% 12% 12%
• Findings from all models summarised below• Figures present the share of the investment gap explained by
financing frictions• Further detail available in the technical paper
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Illustration for Whole Economy
Provide an illustration of national magnitude • Given current data on capital formation, it is very challenging to understand
national domestic firm investment
• Nearly impossible to triangulate our SME survey investment figure
• We provide an illustrative example
• Method uses CSO data to “scale up” the survey to provide a national figure
• Use 2014, 2015 Business Demography Data from CSO to get a scaling factor for each sector/size class and apply these scales
• Large health warning associated with this illustration• National statistics do not provide an accurate SME investment figure for indigenous
companies
• Multinational activity in national sources induces very large volatility which makes benchmarking nearly impossible
• Trend in our data has a 63 per cent correlation coefficient with capital acquisitions in the manufacturing of food and beverages sector
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Aggregated Figures
All €mn 2014 2015 2016
Sample Investment 402 331 254
Aggregated Investment 4,036 3,964 3,063
Gap (Share) -49% -41% -34%
Predicted Aggregate 6,009 5,602 4,110
Gap Level 1,973 1,638 1,046
Modified GFCF (Nominal) 31,731 39,726 44,893
Gap as % of Modified GFCF 6% 4% 2%
Share of Gap Explained by Finance
Method 1 9% 10% 17%
Method 2 17% 15% 18%
Method 3 12% 12% 12%
Financing Value of Gap
Method 1 181 168 180
Method 2 337 250 192
Method 3a 236 196 125
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Conclusions and Policy Implications
A number of findings emerge:• Clear evidence that actual investment is below what would be expected given
how companies are currently performing• The magnitude of this “investment gap” is economically meaningful and is
estimated to be just over 30 per cent in 2016 relative to SMEs actual investment• Using three different methodologies, we estimate that financial factors explain
between 12 per cent and 18 per cent of the investment gap in 2016. • More specifically, we find investment is negatively related to the interest rate,
lowered by credit rationing and borrower discouragement and increased where firms have been able to post tangible collateral
• In 2016, illustrative example suggests gap is 2 per cent of Modified GFCF• Would be great to get an SME investment figure from CSO to benchmarkPolicy implications:
• Policies to reduce cost of credit warranted and can provide additionality to investment activity
• Clear link to collateral availability so that policy instruments targeted at improving collateral available through risk sharing or other guarantee schemes could be worthwhile and help boost investment.
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APPENDIX
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Investment Fundamentals Regression
(1) Investment probability (2) Ln(Investment level)
(margins)
Size-small 0.139*** 1.055***
(0.009) (0.085)
Size-medium 0.328*** 2.200***
(0.013) (0.095)
Default -0.033 -0.252
(0.020) (0.175)
Age 0.000 0.005***
(0.000) (0.001)
Turnover change 0.002*** 0.005**
(0.000) (0.002)
Employee change 0.002*** 0.009***
(0.000) (0.003)
Export 0.120*** 0.365***
(0.012) (0.067)
Profitability- profit 0.070*** 0.215***
(0.010) (0.076)
Profitability- loss 0.003 0.075
(0.013) (0.112)
Unemployment -0.022*** 0.001
(0.006) (0.039)
Wave dummies Yes Yes
Region dummies Yes Yes
Sector dummies Yes Yes
N 12,149 12,149
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Financial Factors in Model
(1) (2)
Investment Decision (Yes, No) Investment Level (in