 |

Credit Can Precipitate Firm Failure: Evidence from Kenyan Manufacturing in the 1990s
Janvier
D.
Nkurunziza,
CSAE
WPS/2005-04
ABSTRACT:
This paper models firm survival in Kenyan manufacturing with a particular emphasis on the effect of
credit on firm resilience. The paper explores how firms coped with the challenging economic
environment that prevailed in the 1990s particularly the effect of the dramatic increase in interest
rates. The key finding is that the burden of past loans precipitated firm failure in the 1990s but
overdrafts did not seem to have had a significant impact on firm failure. Furthermore, older firms
appear to have resisted better than younger ones, but there is no evidence that large firms had higher
survival rates. These results are robust to different specifications, namely probit models, Cox
proportional hazard models and exponential, Gompertz and Weibull parametric hazard models. The
main contribution of the paper is to highlight the role of credit in explaining firm failure in a shockprone
developing economy. The study shows that the key factors explaining firm survival in
developed economies, namely size and age, are not necessarily the most relevant determinants of firm
survival in developing economies. Methodologically, this paper is one of the few that have applied
hazard analysis to firms in developing economies.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Janvier D. Nkurunziza,
"Credit Can Precipitate Firm Failure: Evidence from Kenyan Manufacturing in the 1990s"
(January 10, 2005).
The Centre for the Study of African Economies Working Paper Series.
Working Paper 238.
http://www.bepress.com/csae/paper238
|