Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.

Financial services with the help of modern technology are no longer an exclusive privilege to the high-class individuals and businesses but also to the poor. Through the emergence of microfinance, funds from charitable sources can be transferred toward the poor as altruistic acts. In this paper the...

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Main Authors: Luong, Ngoc Tram., Nguyen, Thi My Hanh., Pham, Thi Thuy Dung.
Other Authors: School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2012
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49255
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-492552019-12-10T10:53:16Z Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org. Luong, Ngoc Tram. Nguyen, Thi My Hanh. Pham, Thi Thuy Dung. School of Humanities and Social Sciences Walter Edgar Theseira DRNTU::Social sciences Financial services with the help of modern technology are no longer an exclusive privilege to the high-class individuals and businesses but also to the poor. Through the emergence of microfinance, funds from charitable sources can be transferred toward the poor as altruistic acts. In this paper the lending activities on www.kiva.org are examined on the basis of loan information and picture-based perceptions on various physical and subjective characteristics to determine the existence and magnitude of lenders’ discrimination and whether competition can help reduce it. We found out that discrimination exists as people in general prefer to lend money to female, younger, more attractive, less obese borrowers and to those look more honest. We also observed an anomaly in the coefficient for creditworthiness, that borrowers who are perceived to be more creditworthy are less favoured. Regarding the effect of competition, a very interesting finding is that not only are male borrowers less favoured than their female fellows but competition, instead of reducing prejudice as predicted by Becker and Arrow (Becker, 1957) (Arrow, 1973), makes male borrowers do even worse. We concluded that although competition in general helps facilitate time to funding for all loans, it does not significantly reduce discrimination at all as expected by theory. Bachelor of Arts 2012-05-16T07:03:06Z 2012-05-16T07:03:06Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49255 en Nanyang Technological University 57 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences
Luong, Ngoc Tram.
Nguyen, Thi My Hanh.
Pham, Thi Thuy Dung.
Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.
description Financial services with the help of modern technology are no longer an exclusive privilege to the high-class individuals and businesses but also to the poor. Through the emergence of microfinance, funds from charitable sources can be transferred toward the poor as altruistic acts. In this paper the lending activities on www.kiva.org are examined on the basis of loan information and picture-based perceptions on various physical and subjective characteristics to determine the existence and magnitude of lenders’ discrimination and whether competition can help reduce it. We found out that discrimination exists as people in general prefer to lend money to female, younger, more attractive, less obese borrowers and to those look more honest. We also observed an anomaly in the coefficient for creditworthiness, that borrowers who are perceived to be more creditworthy are less favoured. Regarding the effect of competition, a very interesting finding is that not only are male borrowers less favoured than their female fellows but competition, instead of reducing prejudice as predicted by Becker and Arrow (Becker, 1957) (Arrow, 1973), makes male borrowers do even worse. We concluded that although competition in general helps facilitate time to funding for all loans, it does not significantly reduce discrimination at all as expected by theory.
author2 School of Humanities and Social Sciences
author_facet School of Humanities and Social Sciences
Luong, Ngoc Tram.
Nguyen, Thi My Hanh.
Pham, Thi Thuy Dung.
format Final Year Project
author Luong, Ngoc Tram.
Nguyen, Thi My Hanh.
Pham, Thi Thuy Dung.
author_sort Luong, Ngoc Tram.
title Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.
title_short Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.
title_full Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.
title_fullStr Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.
title_full_unstemmed Discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.
title_sort discrimination and competition in online microfinance lending – evidence from www.kiva.org.
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/49255
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