Effect of perceived default risk and accounting information quality on the decision to grant credit to SMEs
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2018-05Derechos
© Palgrave Macmillan, part of Springer Nature . This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Risk Management. The final authenticated version is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/ 10.1057/s41283-017-0030-z
Publicado en
Risk Management, May 2018, Volume 20, Issue 2, pp 121-141
Editorial
Palgrave Macmillan
Palabras clave
Perceived risk
Information quality
Credit access
Credit conditions
External audit
SMEs
Resumen/Abstract
ABSTRACT: The present study analyses the influence that perceived default risk and accounting information quality have on the process of credit granting to SMEs. Empirical evidence was obtained from a survey of 471 bank loan officers in Spain, in which they were asked to answer questions relating to audited and not-audited firms. Through a Structural Equations Modeling (SEM) approach, the results confirm that the likelihood
that the loan officers are more willing to provide access to credit to SMEs, and to do so in more favourable conditions, is negatively influenced by perceived default risk and positively influenced by the general perception about accounting information quality. Besides, we find that information quality is an antecedent of perceived risk, so that the latter becomes the central element of the research model. Additionally, the perceptions of the decision-makers regarding all the analysed variables are better for the audited
SMEs than for the unaudited ones.
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