Contract structure, risk sharing and investment choice
Few microfinance-funded businesses grow beyond subsistence entrepreneurship. This paper considers one possible explanation: that the structure of existing microfinance contracts may discourage risky but high-expected return investments. To explore this possibility, I develop a theory that unifies models of investment choice, informal risk sharing, and formal financial contracts. I then test the predictions of this theory using a series of experiments with clients of a large microfinance institution in India. The experiments confirm the theoretical predictions that joint liability creates two inefficiencies. First, borrowers free-ride on their partners, making risky investments without compensating partners for this risk. Second, the addition of peer-monitoring overcompensates, leading to sharp reductions in risk-taking and profitability. Equity-like financing, in which partners share both the benefits and risks of more profitable projects, overcomes both of these inefficiencies and merits further testing in the field.
| Item Type | Working paper |
|---|---|
| Copyright holders | © 2011 The Author |
| Keywords | investment choice, informal insurance, risk sharing, contract design, microfinance, experiment |
| Departments |
Economics STICERD |
| Date Deposited | 14 Feb 2012 11:40 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/41890 |
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