Microfinance Games
Microfinance has been heralded as an effective way to address imperfections in credit markets. But from a theoretical perspective, the success of microfinance contracts has puzzling elements. In particular, the group-based mechanisms often employed are vulnerable to free-riding and collusion, although they can also reduce moral hazard and improve selection. The authors created an experimental economics laboratory in a large urban market in Lima, Peru and over seven months conducted 11 different games that allow them to unpack microfinance mechanisms in a systematic way. They find that risk-taking broadly conforms to predicted patterns, but that behavior is safer than optimal. The results help to explain why pioneering microfinance institutions have been moving away from group-based contracts.
| Year of publication: |
2012
|
|---|---|
| Authors: | Gin??, Xavier ; Jakiela, Pamela ; Karlan, Dean |
| Other Persons: | Morduch, Jonathan (contributor) |
| Publisher: |
Washington, DC : World Bank |
| Subject: | Mikrofinanzierung | Microfinance | Experiment | Vertragstheorie | Contract theory | Asymmetrische Information | Asymmetric information | Kreditrisiko | Credit risk |
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