获得小企业信贷的种族差异:来自薪水保护计划的证据

Sabrina T. Howell, Theresa Kuchler, David Snitkof, J. Stroebel, Jun Wong
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引用次数: 17

摘要

我们通过研究8060亿美元的工资保护计划(PPP)来探讨小企业贷款中种族差异的根源,该计划旨在支持2019冠状病毒病大流行期间的小企业就业。PPP贷款由私人贷款人管理,但由联邦政府担保,这在很大程度上消除了不可观察的信用风险,这是解释种族差异贷款的一个因素。我们的文件显示,即使在控制了公司的邮政编码、行业、贷款规模、PPP批准日期和其他特征之后,黑人拥有的企业从金融科技贷款机构获得PPP贷款的可能性比从传统银行获得PPP贷款的可能性高12.1个百分点(占平均值的70%)。在传统贷款机构中,较小的银行不太可能贷款给黑人所有的公司,而前4大银行在包括控制措施后几乎没有表现出差异。我们使用新颖的数据来表明,这种差异主要不是由预先存在的银行或信贷关系、公司财务状况、金融科技亲和力或借款人申请行为的差异来解释的。相比之下,我们发现,与小型银行相比,黑人拥有的企业从金融科技公司借款的比例更高,在种族敌意高的地方尤其如此,这表明在解释小企业贷款中的一些种族差异时,歧视可能起着重要作用。我们发现,有证据表明,当小型银行将其贷款流程自动化,从而减少人类在贷款发放过程中的参与时,它们向黑人拥有的企业提供PPP贷款的比例会增加,在种族仇恨更严重的地方,这种影响更大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Racial Disparities in Access to Small Business Credit: Evidence from the Paycheck Protection Program
We explore the sources of racial disparities in small business lending by studying the $806 billion Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), which was designed to support small business jobs during the COVID-19 pandemic. PPP loans were administered by private lenders but federally guaranteed, largely eliminating unobservable credit risk as a factor in explaining differential lending by race. We document that even after controlling for a firm’s zip code, industry, loan size, PPP approval date, and other characteristics, Black-owned businesses were 12.1 percentage points (70% of the mean) more likely to obtain their PPP loan from a fintech lender than a traditional bank. Among conventional lenders, smaller banks were much less likely to lend to Black-owned firms, while the Top-4 banks exhibited little to no disparity after including controls. We use novel data to show that the disparity is not primarily explained by differences in pre-existing bank or credit relationships, firm financial positions, fintech affinity, or borrower application behavior. In contrast, we document that Black-owned businesses’ higher rate of borrowing from fintechs compared to smaller banks is particularly large in places with high racial animus, pointing to a potential role for discrimination in explaining some of the racial disparities in small business lending. We find evidence that when small banks automate their lending processes, and thus reduce human involvement in the loan origination process, their rate of PPP lending to Black-owned businesses increases, with larger effects in places with more racial animus.
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