Micro and small enterprises (MSEs) often face persistent difficulties in accessing external finance, particularly small scale, long term loans. In many regions, including Lazio, private banks are reluctant to supply this segment of the market because the fixed administrative costs of small loans are high relative to expected returns. As a result, even creditworthy firms with viable investment projects may encounter credit rationing and higher borrowing costs. Over time, this can lead to adverse selection, where riskier firms have stronger incentives to ask for credit, further reinforcing the lenders’ reluctancy to serve the market.
The Small Credit Fund (Fondo Piccolo Credito, FPC) was introduced to address this market failure by providing zero interest loans to micro and small firms that fall below standard banking thresholds but are not inherently risky. The key policy issue is whether such public financial instruments genuinely relax binding credit constraints and support firm development, or whether they merely substitute for private finance and expose beneficiaries to new financial risks without delivering sustained economic benefits.