Authors
Ben Charoenwong, Meng Miao, Zhengyu Zuo
Publication date
2021/12
Journal
The 9th Annual Conference: Corporate Finance
Description
Using a dataset of over one million local government procurement contracts in China, we study whether the government’s indebtedness causes delays in payment which can be averse to suppliers’ financial conditions. Higher local government distress predicts an increase in accounts receivables for suppliers participating in procurement auctions after the distress period increase. Local governments are less likely to delay payments in areas with more property rights and less likely to delay payment to (1) large companies,(2) those in high-tech industries,(3) state-owned suppliers. Instrumenting for government financial distress by connections of local government officials to senior central communist party leaders increases the point estimates. Our results suggest that local government indebtedness induces a bail-in by firms supplying goods and services to the government. Governments appear to follow a pecking order to pay for government contracts, and firms bailing in the local government are more likely to fail.
Total citations
20222023202411
Scholar articles
B Charoenwong, M Miao, Z Zuo - The 9th Annual Conference: Corporate Finance, 2021