Lending without creditor rights, collateral, or reputation - the “trusted-assistant” loan in 19th century China
This paper considers lending to finance projects in a setting where repayment enforcement appears impossible. The loan was illegal and thus legally unenforceable. Creditors were incapable of applying private coercion to force repayment. Borrowers lacked both collateral and reputation capital. Project cash flows were unobservable. The projects were the acquisition of Imperial administrative posts by scholars in nineteenth century Qing China. The lending mechanism was the “trusted-assistant loan.” Our model of trusted assistant lending shows that it is a renegotiation-proof implementation of efficient state dependent financing. Empirical analysis of officials’ diaries and bank records shows that the employment of trusted-assistant lending and the performance of trusted-assistant loans conforms roughly with the model’s predictions.
Year of publication: |
2017-08
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Authors: | Noe, Thomas ; Meng, Miao ; Guanjie, Niu |
Publisher: |
BOFIT Discussion Paper |
Saved in:
freely available
Type of publication: | Other |
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Language: | English |
Notes: | Noe, Thomas, Meng, Miao and Guanjie, Niu (2017) Lending without creditor rights, collateral, or reputation - the “trusted-assistant” loan in 19th century China. BOFIT Discussion Paper. |
Source: | BASE |
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011912190
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