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Do Microloan Officers Want to Lend to the Less Advantaged? Evidence from a Choice Experiment.

Abstract
The mission of microfinance is generally perceived as compensation for the failure of the mainstream financial institutions to deliver access to finance to the poor. Microloan officers have significant influence on microloans allocation as they contact loan applicants and process information inside microfinance institutions (MFIs). We conduct a choice experiment with microloan officers in Burundi to determine which clients are preferred for microloan allocation and whether the less advantaged are indeed targeted. The results suggest that the allocation of microloans is slightly in favor of the less advantaged, whereas the main determinant is the quality of the applicants' business projects. Somewhat surprisingly, we find only small differences in the determinants of the targeted groups between non-profit and profit-seeking MFIs.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/24731
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  • Working papers
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gupea_2077_24731_1.pdf (528.0Kb)
Date
2011-02
Author
Sagamba, Moïse
Shchetinin, Oleg
Yusupov, Nurmukhammad
Keywords
microfinance
choice experiment
microloan officers
non-pro fit organizations
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
492
Language
eng
Metadata
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