We exploit exogenous variation in firm's public information available to banks to empirically evaluate the importance of adverse selection in the credit market using a Pakistani banking reform that reduced public information. Originally, the central bank published credit information about the firm and (aggregate) credit information about the firm's group. After the reform, the central bank stopped providing the aggregate group-level information. We construct a measure for the amount of information each lender has about a firm's group using the set of firm-bank lending pairs prior to the reform. We show those banks with private information about a firm lent relatively more to that firm than other, less-informed banks following the reform. Re...
Credit bureaus and public credit registers allow lenders to share information about borrowers. Since...
Theory predicts that information sharing among lenders attenuates adverse selection and moral hazard...
Theory predicts that information sharing among lenders attenuates adverse selection and moral hazard...
We exploit exogenous variation in firm's public information available to banks to empirically evalua...
We exploit exogenous variation in the amount of public information available to banks about a firm ...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Economics, 2014.Cataloged from ...
When agents have incentives to coordinate, actions are more sensitive to public than to private info...
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may se...
International audienceBank discouragement is one of the most important factors preventing firms from...
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may se...
We provide the first systematic empirical analysis of how asymmetric information and competition in ...
We present a model with adverse selection where information sharing between lenders arises endogenou...
In many countries, lenders voluntarily provide information about their borrowers to private credit r...
This paper provides evidence that lenders to a firm close to distress have incentives to coordinate:...
Using plausibly exogenous variation in demand for federal funds created by daily shocks to reserve b...
Credit bureaus and public credit registers allow lenders to share information about borrowers. Since...
Theory predicts that information sharing among lenders attenuates adverse selection and moral hazard...
Theory predicts that information sharing among lenders attenuates adverse selection and moral hazard...
We exploit exogenous variation in firm's public information available to banks to empirically evalua...
We exploit exogenous variation in the amount of public information available to banks about a firm ...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Economics, 2014.Cataloged from ...
When agents have incentives to coordinate, actions are more sensitive to public than to private info...
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may se...
International audienceBank discouragement is one of the most important factors preventing firms from...
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may se...
We provide the first systematic empirical analysis of how asymmetric information and competition in ...
We present a model with adverse selection where information sharing between lenders arises endogenou...
In many countries, lenders voluntarily provide information about their borrowers to private credit r...
This paper provides evidence that lenders to a firm close to distress have incentives to coordinate:...
Using plausibly exogenous variation in demand for federal funds created by daily shocks to reserve b...
Credit bureaus and public credit registers allow lenders to share information about borrowers. Since...
Theory predicts that information sharing among lenders attenuates adverse selection and moral hazard...
Theory predicts that information sharing among lenders attenuates adverse selection and moral hazard...