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After the Storm: How Emergency Liquidity Helps Small Businesses Following Natural Disasters

April 2024

Working Paper Number:

CES-24-20

Abstract

Does emergency credit prevent long-term financial distress? We study the causal effects of government-provided recovery loans to small businesses following natural disasters. The rapid financial injection might enable viable firms to survive and grow or might hobble precarious firms with more risk and interest obligations. We show that the loans reduce exit and bankruptcy, increase employment and revenue, unlock private credit, and reduce delinquency. These effects, especially the crowding-in of private credit, appear to reflect resolving uncertainty about repair. We do not find capital reallocation away from neighboring firms and see some evidence of positive spillovers on local entry.

Document Tags and Keywords

Keywords Keywords are automatically generated using KeyBERT, a powerful and innovative keyword extraction tool that utilizes BERT embeddings to ensure high-quality and contextually relevant keywords.

By analyzing the content of working papers, KeyBERT identifies terms and phrases that capture the essence of the text, highlighting the most significant topics and trends. This approach not only enhances searchability but provides connections that go beyond potentially domain-specific author-defined keywords.
:
financial, finance, financing, leverage, borrower, lending, loan, bank, bankruptcy, lender, borrowing, spillover, debt, funding, borrow, credit, shock, disaster

Tags Tags are automatically generated using a pretrained language model from spaCy, which excels at several tasks, including entity tagging.

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Characteristics of Business Owners, Internal Revenue Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Small Business Administration, Ordinary Least Squares, Office of Management and Budget, 2SLS, Longitudinal Business Database, Employer Identification Numbers, General Accounting Office, New York University, Council of Economic Advisers, Paycheck Protection Program, Census Bureau Business Register, Business Register, Master Earnings File, Census Bureau Disclosure Review Board, Integrated Longitudinal Business Database, Regression Discontinuity Design, COVID-19

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