Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
969780 Journal of Public Economics 2011 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Creditworthiness and trustworthiness are almost synonyms because, under asymmetric information, the act of conferring a loan has the indirect effect of signaling the trustworthiness of the borrower. We test the creditworthiness/trustworthiness nexus in an investment game experiment on a sample of participants/non-participants in a microfinance program in Argentina and find that trustors give significantly more to (and believe they will receive more from) microfinance borrowers. The first- and second-order beliefs of trustees are also consistent with this picture. Our findings then show that MF participants appear more trustworthy and this may help microfinance to work. A related consequence is that, if (and only if) borrower's trustworthiness is not public information, the mere loan provision acts as a reputation enhancing signal increasing the borrower's attractiveness as a business partner. In such case we have a channel through which a private financial intermediary contributes to the provision of a public good like information, thereby reducing the adverse consequences of market failures on the creation of economic value.

Research Highlights► Creditworthiness is a signal of trustworthiness under asymmetric information. ► Trustors give more to microfinance borrowers. The latter are more trustworthy. ► Microfinance creates social capital under the form of trustworthiness. ► The loan provision increases the borrower's attractiveness as a business partner. ► Microfinance provides the information necessary to reduce market failures.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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