Publication | Open Access
Access to Collateral and the Democratization of Credit: France's Reform of the Napoleonic Security Code
54
Citations
42
References
2019
Year
LawEntrepreneurshipRural AreasManagementFinancial IntermediationSecuritisationSecured TransactionCredit Access InequalitySovereign DebtEconomicsNapoleonic Security CodeCredit MarketLoansVenture CapitalGeography Of FinanceFinanceAbstract FranceBusiness HistoryBusinessFinancial CrisisFinancingFinancial StructureCorporate FinanceBankruptcy
ABSTRACT France's Ordonnance 2006‐346 repudiated the notion of possessory ownership in the Napoleonic Code, easing the pledge of physical assets in a country where credit was highly concentrated. A differences‐test strategy shows that firms operating newly pledgeable assets significantly increased their borrowing following the reform. Small, young, and financially constrained businesses benefitted the most, observing improved credit access and real‐side outcomes. Start‐ups emerged with higher “at‐inception” leverage, located farther from large cities, with more assets‐in‐place than before. Their exit and bankruptcy rates declined. Spatial analyses show that the reform reached firms in rural areas, reducing credit access inequality across France's countryside.
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