1. Home
  2. Studien
  3. Business financing in Europe: How do higher interest rates impact companies’ financial situation?
Daniel Bendel / Markus Demary / Michael Voigtländer IW-Report Nr. 28 18. September 2017 Business financing in Europe: How do higher interest rates impact companies’ financial situation?

Companies’ access to finance has an important impact on their profitability and growth prospects. Without external financing, most firms are not able to invest, which is a prerequisite for economic growth. Unlike in the US, which has a capital market-based financial system, banks are the dominant lenders for firms in the Eurozone.

PDF herunterladen
How do higher interest rates impact companies’ financial situation?
Daniel Bendel / Markus Demary / Michael Voigtländer IW-Report Nr. 28 18. September 2017

Business financing in Europe: How do higher interest rates impact companies’ financial situation?

IW-Report

Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft (IW) Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft (IW)

Companies’ access to finance has an important impact on their profitability and growth prospects. Without external financing, most firms are not able to invest, which is a prerequisite for economic growth. Unlike in the US, which has a capital market-based financial system, banks are the dominant lenders for firms in the Eurozone.

Banking crises endanger the access to finance. In the wake of the banking and sovereign debt crisis in the Eurozone risk premia for sovereign debt went up and spilled over to banking markets. Besides sovereigns, also firms faced credit constraints, especially in countries with presumably less sustainable public debt. After the ECB accelerated its accommodative monetary policy stance even further, interest rates for sovereigns and firms went down considerably, enabling firms to lend money at historically low charges. With the strengthened recovery of the Eurozone, the end of this ultra-low interest rate environment seems to be near, posing new challenges for firms in the Eurozone.

The aim of this study is to analyze, how firms have dealt with this changing financing environment in the recent years and to which degree companies are prepared for a change towards higher interest rates. For answering this research question we use data from the survey on the access to finance of enterprises (SAFE), provided by the ECB.

We identify companies that are vulnerable to increasing interest rates, as they will presumably encounter economic problems when financing costs will rise. The share of vulnerable companies is extremely high in Greece (9.4 percent), Italy (8.5 percent) and France (5.7 percent). The lowest rate can be found in Germany (0.7 percent). With respect to the size of the national business sectors, 39 percent of all vulnerable firms a located in Italy, 23 percent in France and 15 percent in Spain. Thus, these countries could be hit hard when the ECB starts to tighten monetary policy. As comparatively many large companies are prone to the risk of increasing interest rates in Portugal (4.0 percent of the large Portuguese companies) and Greece (10.0 percent of the large Greek companies), the labor markets of these countries could be affected disproportionally when interest rates increase to fast or too high.

PDF herunterladen
How do higher interest rates impact companies’ financial situation?
Daniel Bendel / Markus Demary / Michael Voigtländer IW-Report Nr. 28 18. September 2017

Daniel Bendel / Markus Demary / Michael Voigtländer: Business financing in Europe – How do higher interest rates impact companies’ financial situation?

IW-Report

Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft (IW) Institut der deutschen Wirtschaft (IW)

Mehr zum Thema

Artikel lesen
Kein Bock mehr auf die EU: Die AfD und ihre beiden Parteivorsitzenden Alice Weidel und Tino Chrupalla wollen die EU in ihrer jetzigen Form abschaffen.
Hubertus Bardt / Lennart Bolwin / Berthold Busch / Jürgen Matthes Pressemitteilung 19. Mai 2024

Europawahl: Dexit würde 690 Milliarden Euro kosten

Die Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) fordert den Austritt Deutschlands aus der EU. Dieser sogenannte Dexit würde einer neuen Studie des Instituts der deutschen Wirtschaft (IW) zufolge nicht nur Milliarden Euro Wertschöpfung kosten, sondern auch Millionen ...

IW

Artikel lesen
Hubertus Bardt / Lennart Bolwin / Berthold Busch / Jürgen Matthes IW-Trends Nr. 2 19. Mai 2024

Brexit – Kein Vorbild für Deutschland

Die Entscheidung des Vereinigten Königreichs, die Europäische Union (EU) zu verlassen, hat bisher keine Nachahmer gefunden. Mit dem Verlust der Integrationsvorteile gehen für das Vereinigte Königreich erhebliche Handelshemmnisse und wirtschaftliche Nachteile ...

IW

Mehr zum Thema

Inhaltselement mit der ID 8880