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Distances involved in accessing basic services can constitute a major barrier to development. This paper analyzes the relationship between the distance separating households from microfinance institutions' offices in Niger, and the low levels of development and performance of the microfinance sector in the country. To cope with the effects of geographical distance, microfinance institutions adapt their policies through more restrictive loan conditions, higher interest rates, and more intensive screening. The authors to discuss the tension between access and sustainability in the context of financial services for the poor.
Access to Finance --- Access to finance --- Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Credit market --- Credit market access --- Debt Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial services --- Households --- Interest rates --- Loan --- Loan conditions --- Microfinance --- Microfinance institutions
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Distances involved in accessing basic services can constitute a major barrier to development. This paper analyzes the relationship between the distance separating households from microfinance institutions' offices in Niger, and the low levels of development and performance of the microfinance sector in the country. To cope with the effects of geographical distance, microfinance institutions adapt their policies through more restrictive loan conditions, higher interest rates, and more intensive screening. The authors to discuss the tension between access and sustainability in the context of financial services for the poor.
Access to Finance --- Access to finance --- Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Credit market --- Credit market access --- Debt Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial services --- Households --- Interest rates --- Loan --- Loan conditions --- Microfinance --- Microfinance institutions
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This paper estimates the relationship between initial village inequality and subsequent household income growth for a large sample of households in rural China. Using a rich longitudinal survey spanning the years 1987-2002, and controlling for an array of household and village characteristics, the paper finds that households located in higher inequality villages experienced significantly lower income growth through the 1990s. However, local inequality's predictive power and effects are significantly diminished by the end of the sample. The paper exploits several advantages of the household-level data to explore hypotheses that shed light on the channels by which inequality affects growth. Biases due to aggregation and heterogeneity of returns to own-resources, previously suggested as candidate explanations for the relationship, are both ruled out. Instead, the evidence points to unobserved village institutions at the time of economic reforms that were associated with household access to higher income activities as the source of the link between inequality and growth. The empirical analysis addresses a number of pertinent econometric issues including measurement error and attrition, but underscores others that are likely to be intractable for all investigations of the inequality-growth relationship.
Access to Finance --- Annual Growth --- Credit Market --- Dynamic Panel --- Economic Reforms --- Empirical Analysis --- Enterprises --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Household Income --- Income Growth --- Inequality --- Poverty Impact Evaluation --- Poverty Reduction --- Rural Inequality --- Rural Poverty Reduction --- Services & Transfers to Poor --- Villages
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This paper provides evidence that commercial lenders in Peru free ride off their peers' screening efforts. Leveraging a discontinuity in the loan approval process of a large bank, the study finds that competing lenders responded to additional loan approvals by issuing approvals of their own. Competing lenders captured almost three-quarters of the new loans to previously financially excluded borrowers, greatly diminishing the profits accruing to the initiating bank. Lenders may therefore underinvest in screening new borrowers and expanding financial inclusion, as their competitors reap some of the benefit. The results highlight that information spillovers between lenders may operate outside credit registries.
Access to Credit --- Access to Finance --- Asymmetric Information --- Banking --- Credit Market Competition --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Inclusion --- Private Sector Development --- Small and Medium Size Enterprises --- SME Finance
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This paper estimates the relationship between initial village inequality and subsequent household income growth for a large sample of households in rural China. Using a rich longitudinal survey spanning the years 1987-2002, and controlling for an array of household and village characteristics, the paper finds that households located in higher inequality villages experienced significantly lower income growth through the 1990s. However, local inequality's predictive power and effects are significantly diminished by the end of the sample. The paper exploits several advantages of the household-level data to explore hypotheses that shed light on the channels by which inequality affects growth. Biases due to aggregation and heterogeneity of returns to own-resources, previously suggested as candidate explanations for the relationship, are both ruled out. Instead, the evidence points to unobserved village institutions at the time of economic reforms that were associated with household access to higher income activities as the source of the link between inequality and growth. The empirical analysis addresses a number of pertinent econometric issues including measurement error and attrition, but underscores others that are likely to be intractable for all investigations of the inequality-growth relationship.
Access to Finance --- Annual Growth --- Credit Market --- Dynamic Panel --- Economic Reforms --- Empirical Analysis --- Enterprises --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Household Income --- Income Growth --- Inequality --- Poverty Impact Evaluation --- Poverty Reduction --- Rural Inequality --- Rural Poverty Reduction --- Services & Transfers to Poor --- Villages
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Until recently rigorous impact evaluations have been rare in the area of finance and private sector development. One reason for this is the perception that many policies and projects in this area lend themselves less to formal evaluations. However, a vanguard of new impact evaluations on areas as diverse as fostering microenterprise growth, microfinance, rainfall insurance, and regulatory reform demonstrates that in many circumstances serious evaluation is possible. The purpose of this paper is to synthesize and distil the policy and implementation lessons emerging from these studies, use them to demonstrate the feasibility of impact evaluations in a broader array of topics, and thereby help prompt new impact evaluations for projects going forward.
Access to credit --- Access to Finance --- Access to finance --- Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Banks --- Banks and Banking Reform --- Capital investment --- Capital stock --- Credit constraints --- Credit market --- Credit market failures --- Debt Markets --- Emerging Markets --- Entrepreneurial ability --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Literacy --- Financial support --- Greater access --- Households --- Interest rates --- International bank --- Key challenges --- Lack of capital --- Loan --- Microfinance --- Private Sector Development --- Self-employment --- Source of income
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Until recently rigorous impact evaluations have been rare in the area of finance and private sector development. One reason for this is the perception that many policies and projects in this area lend themselves less to formal evaluations. However, a vanguard of new impact evaluations on areas as diverse as fostering microenterprise growth, microfinance, rainfall insurance, and regulatory reform demonstrates that in many circumstances serious evaluation is possible. The purpose of this paper is to synthesize and distil the policy and implementation lessons emerging from these studies, use them to demonstrate the feasibility of impact evaluations in a broader array of topics, and thereby help prompt new impact evaluations for projects going forward.
Access to credit --- Access to Finance --- Access to finance --- Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Banks --- Banks and Banking Reform --- Capital investment --- Capital stock --- Credit constraints --- Credit market --- Credit market failures --- Debt Markets --- Emerging Markets --- Entrepreneurial ability --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial Literacy --- Financial support --- Greater access --- Households --- Interest rates --- International bank --- Key challenges --- Lack of capital --- Loan --- Microfinance --- Private Sector Development --- Self-employment --- Source of income
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How do borrowers respond to improvements in a lender's ability to punish defaulters? This paper reports the results of a randomized field experiment in rural Malawi that examines the impact of fingerprinting borrowers in a context where a unique identification system is absent. Fingerprinting allows the lender to more effectively use dynamic repayment incentives: withholding future loans from past defaulters while rewarding good borrowers with better loan terms. Consistent with a simple model of borrower heterogeneity and information asymmetries, fingerprinting led to substantially higher repayment rates for borrowers with the highest ex ante default risk, but had no effect for the rest of the borrowers. The change in repayment rates is driven by reductions in adverse selection (smaller loan sizes) and lower moral hazard (for example, less diversion of loan-financed fertilizer from its intended use on the cash crop).
Access to credit --- Access to Finance --- Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress --- Borrower --- Collateral --- Credit market --- Credit markets --- Debt Markets --- Defaulters --- Economic Theory & Research --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Information asymmetries --- International bank --- Lender --- Lenders --- Loan --- Loan sizes --- Loan terms --- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth --- Microfinance --- Moral hazard --- Profitability --- Public policy --- Repayment --- Repayment rates --- Rural credit
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The paper discusses the reasons for supporting international trade finance during a liquidity crisis. Targeted interventions are justified when prices are rigid and sellers insist on immediate payment due to fears of strategic default. In this case, buyers who reject the seller's offer fail to internalize the seller's benefit from additional liquidity. A general infusion of credit will not facilitate the beneficial transaction, but an infusion targeted at the buyer's bank's trade finance supply will do so. Since there is a need for interventions in one country to benefit actors in another, international coordination is called for.
Access to Finance --- Asymmetric information --- Bank credit --- Borrower --- Contract enforcement --- Credit market --- Credit policies --- Credit subsidies --- Debt Markets --- Economic Theory and Research --- Emerging Markets --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Financial markets --- Government interventions --- International Bank --- International Economics & Trade --- International Trade --- International transactions --- Law and Development --- Liquidity --- Liquidity Crisis --- Loan --- Moral hazard --- Private Sector Development --- Trade credit --- Trade Finance --- Trade Law --- Transaction
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Since 2010, Lesotho has implemented legal and institutional changes to allow female land ownership, established a new land agency, reduced the cost of registering land, and carried out systematic urban land titling. Analysis using administrative data shows that these reforms triggered discontinuous and sustained changes in quality of service delivery, female land ownership, and registered land sales and mortgage volume. Land and credit market activation is, however, exclusively due to policy reforms. While (subsidized) systematic land registration allows women to access documented land rights, these effects may not be sustained without further regulatory change, highlighting the importance of reducing fees and streamlining processes to improve urban land and financial market functioning as a key precondition for Africa's expected wave of urbanization translating into productive cities and jobs.
Access To Finance --- Credit Market --- Finance and Financial Sector Development --- Gender --- Gender and Development --- Gender and Economics --- Housing Finance --- Land Market --- Land Reform --- Municipal Housing and Land --- Poverty --- Urban Development --- Urban Economic Development --- Urban Land Management --- Urban Land Policy --- Urban Poverty
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