Paper
Ex-ante Moral Hazard and Repayment Performance under Group Lending
Focusing on the dynamic aspects of group-lending
27 pages
This paper investigates whether group lending has the information advantage of overcoming ex-ante moral hazard and the efficiency advantage of improving repayment performance, when compared to individual liability lending.
The paper attempts to contribute to ex-ante moral hazard literature by formalizing the dynamic incentive of non-refinancing threat. It assumes that such a threat affects borrowers' efforts and repayment performance under group lending and individual liability lending.
The paper constructs a simple dynamic model in an environment characterized by ex-ante moral hazard and lack of collateral. The results of the model reveal that:
- When group members make effort decisions non-cooperatively, individual equilibrium effort under group lending is lower than that under individual liability lending;
- Mere joint liability and non-refinancing threat cannot mitigate ex-ante moral hazard;
- When group members coordinate their effort choices, the analytical result of the comparison in individual equilibrium effort between individual liability lending and group lending depend on certain conditions;
- Group lending without peer cooperation achieves the same performance as individual liability lending;
- Group lending with peer cooperation outperforms individual liability lending in encouraging repayment.
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