This paper uses firm-level financial data for Czech firms and tests for the role of companies' financial structure in the transmission of monetary policy. Our results indicate that higher shortterm interest rates coincide with lower shares of total debt, short-term bank loans, and long-term debt.
We find that firm-specific characteristics, such as size, age, collateral, and profit, affect the way in which monetary policy changes are reflected in the external financing decisions of firms. These findings indicate the presence of informational frictions in credit markets and hence provide some empirical evidence of the existence of broad credit and relationship lending channels in the Czech Republic.