Volume 18, Issue 3 September 2022

Credit Shocks and Allocative Efficiency during a Financial Crisis

Abstract

This paper studies the effect of credit supply shocks on aggregate labor productivity during a financial crisis. Using data on the universe of Italian manufacturing firms, we decompose aggregate productivity growth in changes in average productivity of incumbents, labor share reallocation among incumbents, entry, and exit. We estimate the impact of industry-specific exogenous credit supply shocks on each component. We find that credit supply tightening entails a drop in average productivity, counterbalanced by the reallocation of labor towards more productive firms, and no significant effect on the contribution of entry and exit to productivity growth. The offsetting response of reallocation is stronger in ex ante more financially constrained industries.

Authors

  • Andrea Linarello
  • Andrea Petrella
  • Enrico Sette

JEL codes

  • L25
  • O47
  • G01
  • E44

Other papers in this issue

Claudio Borio and Piti Disyatat and Mikael Juselius and Phurichai Rungcharoenkitkul

Eli Remolona and James Yetman

Daniel Cooper and María José Luengo-Prado and Giovanni P. Olivei

Michele Ca' Zorzi and Adam Cap and Andrej Mijakovic and Michal Rubaszek

Jose M. Berrospide and Ralf R. Meisenzahl