Conventional wisdom and increasing empirical evidence in microfinance hold that women are better risks than men. In the present work, a logit model controlling for a range of borrower and loan characteristics was carried out to assess the validity of this statement by comparing repayment rates. The study includes a sample of loans disbursed by a Nicaraguan microfinance institution during the years 2003-2004, a period characterized by high oil prices. A dichotomous dependent variable is created, taking the value of 1 if the credit turned out to be of the best quality i.e. an “A ” credit by Nicaraguan regulations, and 0 otherwise. The dependent variable is regressed on variables summarizing the characteristics of the borrower and the loan to ...
This study examines the impact of loan officer characteristics on repayment rates of microfinance bo...
Although evidence from literature in social psychology, sociology, the economics of gender, and busi...
This paper examines the effects of group identity in the credit market. Exploiting the quasirandom a...
Conventional wisdom and increasing empirical evidence in microfinance hold that women are better ris...
Conventional wisdom and increasing empirical evidence in microfinance hold that women are better ri...
Conventional wisdom and increasing empirical evidence in microfinance hold that women are better ris...
A majority of microfinance institutions (MFIs) in poor countries target women. There have been sever...
Summary This paper uses a global data set of 350 microfinance institutions (MFIs) in 70 countries to...
This paper uses a global data set of 350 microfinance institutions (MFIs) in 70 countries to study t...
Growing evidence suggests that women are more likely to repay collateral-free microloans than men. H...
Microfinance institutions serve a majority of female borrowers. But do men and women benefit from sa...
Most of the customers of microfinance institutions are female. But do men and women benefit from the...
This paper investigates why and under which institutional circumstances female membership in microfi...
This paper is the first to analyze the credit risk of a microfinance institution based on the loan p...
This study explores the role played by gender in lending trans-actions and specifically its effects ...
This study examines the impact of loan officer characteristics on repayment rates of microfinance bo...
Although evidence from literature in social psychology, sociology, the economics of gender, and busi...
This paper examines the effects of group identity in the credit market. Exploiting the quasirandom a...
Conventional wisdom and increasing empirical evidence in microfinance hold that women are better ris...
Conventional wisdom and increasing empirical evidence in microfinance hold that women are better ri...
Conventional wisdom and increasing empirical evidence in microfinance hold that women are better ris...
A majority of microfinance institutions (MFIs) in poor countries target women. There have been sever...
Summary This paper uses a global data set of 350 microfinance institutions (MFIs) in 70 countries to...
This paper uses a global data set of 350 microfinance institutions (MFIs) in 70 countries to study t...
Growing evidence suggests that women are more likely to repay collateral-free microloans than men. H...
Microfinance institutions serve a majority of female borrowers. But do men and women benefit from sa...
Most of the customers of microfinance institutions are female. But do men and women benefit from the...
This paper investigates why and under which institutional circumstances female membership in microfi...
This paper is the first to analyze the credit risk of a microfinance institution based on the loan p...
This study explores the role played by gender in lending trans-actions and specifically its effects ...
This study examines the impact of loan officer characteristics on repayment rates of microfinance bo...
Although evidence from literature in social psychology, sociology, the economics of gender, and busi...
This paper examines the effects of group identity in the credit market. Exploiting the quasirandom a...