Lender Behavior and Market Outcomes in Informal Credit
In an informal credit market, a moneylender rejects a significant portion of first-time loan applications, despite these applicants being willing to borrow at the prevailing high interest rates. Analyze the economic rationale behind the moneylender's decision to deny these loans rather than simply charging a higher interest rate to compensate for potential risk. In your analysis, explain the role of the screening process in the lender's strategy.
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Ch.9 Lenders and borrowers and differences in wealth - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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High Interest Rates for Loans in Chambar
In a rural credit market, a large number of first-time loan applicants are rejected by moneylenders, even though the applicants are willing to pay the high prevailing interest rates. Which of the following statements best analyzes the underlying reason for this high rejection rate?
Loan Application Evaluation in an Informal Credit Market
Lender Behavior and Market Outcomes in Informal Credit
In an informal credit market where more than half of all loan applications from first-time borrowers are rejected, the high rejection rate is primarily a result of the interest rate being set so high that most applicants cannot afford the loan.
Lender's Rationale for High Loan Rejection Rates
In an informal credit market, lenders use a detailed evaluation process for new borrowers. Match each observation from this market with the economic principle or rationale that best explains it.
A moneylender in a rural village is evaluating a farmer who has applied for a loan for the first time. Arrange the following actions in the most likely chronological order the lender would take to decide whether to approve the loan.
In an informal credit market, when a lender rejects a significant number of loan applications from first-time borrowers based on perceived untrustworthiness rather than their willingness to pay the prevailing interest rate, this phenomenon is known as ____.
Evaluating a Policy Intervention in an Informal Credit Market
Two economists are analyzing an informal credit market where moneylenders reject more than half of all first-time loan applicants. They offer competing explanations:
- Economist A: "The high rejection rate is a simple supply and demand issue. The lenders set the interest rate so high to maximize profit that most new applicants simply cannot afford the repayments and are therefore rejected."
- Economist B: "The interest rate is not the main filter. Lenders are primarily concerned with the risk of default. They reject any applicant they deem untrustworthy through a rigorous screening process, regardless of the applicant's willingness to pay the high rate."
Based on the typical dynamics of such credit markets, which economist's explanation is more valid, and why?
In an informal credit market where more than half of all loan applications from first-time borrowers are rejected, the high rejection rate is primarily a result of the interest rate being set so high that most applicants cannot afford the loan.
Lender Behavior and Market Outcomes in Informal Credit