We investigate the impact of employment protection regulation on firms’ reluctance to apply for bank finance (loans and overdrafts). Our findings reveal that longer notice periods reduce the likelihood that firms are discouraged from applying for bank finance in the case of blue-collar workers, but they increase it in the case of whitecollar workers. Our interpretation is that, in the case of blue-collar workers, the benefits of extra time to transfer their knowledge and expertise to remaining workers outweigh the cost savings associated with dismissal. However, in the case of white-collar workers, the benefits to firms of dismissing high-cost workers outweigh the risk of losing the knowledge and expertise of employees leaving the firm.Our results are robust to alternative specifications, endogeneity issues, and a battery of robustness tests.
Article navigation
31 March 2025
Research Article|
March 31 2025
Labour Protection Legislation and Discouraged Borrowers in Europe Available to Purchase
Andrea Moro;
Andrea Moro
Centre for Innovation and Research at Lund University (CIRCLE)
, Lund, Sweden
Dalm Management and Strategy Ltd
, Newport Pagnell, UK
Search for other works by this author on:
Annalisa Ferrando
European Central Bank
, Frankfurt am Main Germany
Search for other works by this author on:
We thank the editor and two anonymous referees for their constructive comments and valuable suggestions. We would also like to thank seminar participants at the 2023 EFA European Conference in Aalborg, Denmark for helpful comments on a previous version of the paper. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the ECB/Eurosystem/Cranfield University.
Online ISSN: 2693-9320
Print ISSN: 2693-9312
© 2025 A. Moro and A. Ferrando
2025
A. Moro and A. Ferrando
Licensed re-use rights only
Review of Corporate Finance (2025) 5 (1-2): 61–115.
Citation
Moro A, Ferrando A (2025), "Labour Protection Legislation and Discouraged Borrowers in Europe". Review of Corporate Finance, Vol. 5 No. 1-2 pp. 61–115, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/114.00000071
Download citation file:
Suggested Reading
Corporate social responsibility and corporate payout policy: the impact of product market competition
International Journal of Managerial Finance (December,2020)
Risk-based capital regulation revisited: evidence from the early 2000s
Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance (May,2015)
Regulatory capital and its effect on credit growth, non-performing loans and bank efficiency: Evidence from Ghana
Journal of Financial Economic Policy (November,2015)
Defining and measuring business risk in an economic‐capital framework
Journal of Risk Finance (August,2008)
Related Chapters
A Proposal to Eliminate Poverty by Including the Poor as Shareholders in Wealth Producing Companies
Health, Money, Commerce, and Wealth
The Effects of FinTech on the Banking Sector: Evidence From China and Vietnam
Transformation for Sustainable Business and Management Practices: Exploring the Spectrum of Industry 5.0
Capital, Liquidity, Profitability, and Credit Risk Nexus: A Panel VAR Study on Selected Developing Countries
Macroeconomic Risk and Growth in the Southeast Asian Countries: Insight from SEA
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
