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Credit crunch forces personal financing by small business owners

Credit crunch forces personal financing by small business owners

Small businesses often rely heavily on loans to stay afloat. The recent economic recession has created a reduction in available credit for many small businesses, which makes it difficult for many businesses to operate.
Tansel Yilmazer of MU’s College of Human Environmental Sciences said that lack of available credit has forced many small-business owners to use their household savings or other personal assets to support their businesses, which puts their personal assets at risk.
Yilmazer, an assistant professor in the personal financial planning department, said that due to the reduction in credit availability, small and family-owned businesses look to reduce their dependence on outside financing by using two general strategies.
• The first strategy involves diminishing or eliminating the need for financing by reducing the cost of operations and carefully managing the cash flow of the business.
• The second type is to acquire finances by raising money from personal and other sources external to the business without resorting to bank loans.
Yilmazer said that businesses that use owner resources and delay payments for household expenses are the ones that typically report a need for further financing for their businesses. Because these business owners have not established relationships with banks, they may face problems obtaining future bank loans.
Yilmazer said the recent recession has affected the direction of the resource flow from household to business, and the owners might be putting their own assets at risk for the business.
“Recession has increased the risk of business failure,” Yilmazer said. “Since business is inherently risky, financing with owner resources would seem to extend that risk to the household in ways that owners may not be adequately considering.”
Yilmazer found that the use of financial resources is a two-way street in small and family-owned businesses and confirmed that the family and business interact and resource exchanges occur in both directions. She said that though small businesses can provide income for households, owners need to be aware that financing a business from household funds opens the door for household assets to become susceptible to loss.
“Business ownership is an important household investment,” Yilmazer said. “Ownership may serve as a source of income and expenses as well as an investment vehicle, but it is not generally understood or considered as a household portfolio risk. Small and family businesses may be riskier than other investments because they are more susceptible to attrition.”
Yilmazer’s study was published in the Journal of Family and Economic Issues and was co-authored with Holly Schrank from Purdue University.

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