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Determinants of household access to and participation in formal and informal credit markets in malawi

Aliou Diagne
- 01 May 1999 - 
- pp 1-68
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In this article, the authors used the concept of credit limit to analyze the determinants of household access to and participation in informal and formal credit markets in Malawi and found that getting access to credit is much more important than its cost for these households, hence, credit policies should focus on making access easier rather than providing credit with subsidized interest rates.
Abstract
The paper uses the concept of credit limit to analyze the determinants of household access to and participation in informal and formal credit markets in Malawi. Households are found to be credit constrained, on average, both in the formal and informal sectors; they borrow, on average, less than half of any increase in their credit lines. Furthermore, they are not discouraged in their participation and borrowing decisions by further increases in the formal interest rate and/or the transaction costs associated with getting formal credit. This suggests that getting access to credit is much more important than its cost for these households. Hence, credit policies should focus on making access easier rather than providing credit with subsidized interest rates. The composition of household assets is found to be much more important as a determinant of household access to formal credit than the total value of household assets or landholding size. In particular, a higher share of land and livestock in the total value of household assets is negatively correlated with access to formal credit. However, land remains a significant determinant of access to informal credit. Therefore, poor households whose assets consist mostly of land and livestock but who want to diversify into nonfarm income generation activities may be constrained by lack of capital. As informal loans are usually too small to help poor households start a viable nonfarm business, these households may be forced to rely on farming as the sole source of income, despite its unreliability because of the frequency of drought in Malawi. Finally, formal and informal credit are found to be imperfect substitutes. In particular, formal credit, whenever available, reduces but does not completely eliminate informal borrowing. This suggests that the two forms of credit fulfill different functions in the household's intertemporal transfer of resources.

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Access to credit and its impact on welfare in Malawi

TL;DR: In this paper, access to credit and its impact on welfare in Malawi is discussed. But access to micro-credit may not be an effective way of alleviating poverty if the necessary infrastructure and socioeconomic environment are lacking.
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Empirical measurements of households' access to credit and credit constraints in developing countries

TL;DR: In this article, a new methodological framework for measuring the level of household access to credit is presented, which provides an analytical framework for examining the determinants of household credit limits and derives implications on information needed to examine the extent to which households are credit constrained.
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Formal and Informal Rural Credit in Four Provinces of Vietnam

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a survey of 932 rural households to uncover how the rural credit market operates in Vietnam and found that formal loans are almost entirely for production and asset accumulation, while informal loans are used for consumption smoothening.
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Many borrow, more save, and all insure: implications for food and micro-finance policy

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Empirical measurement of credit rationing in agriculture: a methodological survey

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors give an overview of the various methods for measuring credit rationing that are employed in the literature and conduct a comparative evaluation of their specific strengths or shortcomings.
References
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Limited-Dependent and Qualitative Variables in Econometrics

G. S. Maddala
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of the use of truncated distributions in the context of unions and wages, and some results on truncated distribution Bibliography Index and references therein.
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Credit Rationing in Markets with Imperfect Information.

TL;DR: In this paper, a model is developed to provide the first theoretical justification for true credit rationing in a loan market, where the amount of the loan and amount of collateral demanded affect the behavior and distribution of borrowers, and interest rates serve as screening devices for evaluating risk.
ReportDOI

Instrumental variables regression with weak instruments

Douglas O. Staiger, +1 more
- 01 May 1997 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed asymptotic distribution theory for instrumental variable regression when the partial correlation between the instruments and a single included endogenous variable is weak, here modeled as local to zero.
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