Technology and Financial Structure: Are Innovative Firms Different?
Ioana Marinescu,
Alexander Klemm,
Stephen Bond and
Philippe Aghion
Scholarly Articles from Harvard University Department of Economics
Abstract:
We use data on publicly traded U.K. firms to investigate whether financing choices differ systematically with R&D intensity. As well as looking at a balance sheet measure of the debt/assets ratio, we also consider the probability of raising finance by issuing new equity, and the shares of bank debt and secured debt in total debt. We find a nonlinear relationship with the debt/assets ratio: firms that report positive but low R&D use more debt finance than firms that report no R&D, but the use of debt finance falls with R&D intensity among those firms that report R&D. We find a simpler relationship with the probability of issuing new equity: Firms that report R&D are more likely to raise funds by issuing shares than firms that report no R&D, and this probability increases with R&D intensity. The shares of bank debt and secured debt in total debt are both lower for firms that report R&D compared to those that do not, and tend to fall as R&D intensity rises. We discuss possible explanations for these patterns.
Date: 2004
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (91)
Published in Journal of the European Economic Association
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Journal Article: Technology and Financial Structure: Are Innovative Firms Different? (2004) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hrv:faseco:3200323
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