Microfinance and Moneylenders: Long-run Effects of MFIs on Informal Credit Market in Bangladesh

Author:

Berg Claudia1,Emran Shahe2,Shilpi Forhad3

Affiliation:

1. Research , International Monetary Fund , 700 19th St NW , District of Columbia , 20431-0001 , WA , USA

2. IPD Columbia University , Uris Hall , New York , 10027-6902 , NY , USA

3. World Bank Group , District of Columbia , WA , USA

Abstract

Abstract This paper provides evidence on the effects of microfinance competition on moneylender interest rates and households' dependence on informal credit. The views among practitioners diverge sharply: proponents claim that the MFI competition reduces both the moneylender interest rate and households' reliance on informal credit, while critics argue the opposite. Taking advantage of recent econometric approaches to address selection on unobservables without imposing standard exclusion restrictions, we find that the MFI competition does not reduce moneylender interest rates, partially repudiating the proponents. There is no perceptible effect at low levels of the MFI coverage, but when the MFI coverage is high enough, the moneylender interest rate increases significantly. In contrast, a household's dependence on informal credit goes down after becoming an MFI member, which contradicts part of the critic's argument. The evidence is consistent with models where either the MFIs or the moneylenders engage in cream skimming, and fixed costs are important in informal lending.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Economics and Econometrics

Reference47 articles.

1. Aleem, I. 1993. “Imperfect Information, Screening, and the Costs of Informal Lending: A Study of a Rural Credit Market in Pakistan.” in The Economics of Rural Organizations: Theory, Practice, and Policy, edited by Karla Hoff, Avishay Braverman, and Joseph E.Stiglitz, Oxford University Press.

2. Alexander-Tedeschi, G. and D. Karlan. 2009. Cross-sectional Impact Analysis: Bias from Drop-Outs. FAI: Yale University.

3. Armendariz, B., and J. Morduch. 2010. The Economics of Microfinance. MIT Press.

4. Banerjee, A. 2003. “Contracting Constraints, Credit Markets, and Economic Development.” Chapter in Advances in Economics and Econometrics: Theory and Applications, Eighth World Congress, Vol. III , edited by Mathias Dewatripont, Lars Peter Hansen and Stephen J. Turnovsky.

5. Banerjee, A. 2013. “Microcredit Under the Microscope: What Have We Learned in the Past Two Decades, and What Do We Need to Know?.” Annual Review of Economics, 5 : 487–519.

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