Group lending with covariate risk
Date
2022
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Journal of Development Economics
Abstract
Group-based lending with joint liability has been a major tool microfinance institutions (‘‘MFIs’’) have
employed to improve lending feasibility. The related theoretical literature typically assumes borrowers face
independent risk. This paper examines how covariate risk affects the usefulness of joint liability lending in the
hidden-information setting of Stiglitz and Weiss (1981) and Ghatak (2000). In a benchmark setting where all
agents face the same degree of covariate risk, greater correlation renders group lending less effective; this is
because the effective rate of joint liability is reduced when borrowers are more likely to fail together. We focus
on a setting where extensive and intensive margins are distinguished: some agents face independent risk
while others face correlated risk. We find that an intermediate prevalence of correlated risk can lead to lower
outreach than both a low and a high prevalence. Thus, reaching a market with mixed covariate risk profiles,
e.g. farmers and micro-entrepreneurs, can be harder than reaching markets with a single profile of either kind.
Assuming limited ability of lenders to use information on borrower correlation, we find that higher outreach
is often achievable by separately servicing correlated and non-correlated borrowers. This can help explain the
existence of specialized institutions such as agricultural banks versus standard microenterprise-focused MFIs.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Adverse selection, Covariate risk, Group lending