Case Study
Credit Bureaus and the Rural Microfinance Sector: Peru, Guatemala and Bolivia
Credit Reporting Systems can facilitate credit deepening
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129 pages
This paper presents the experiential lessons in credit reporting systems, using the case studies of Peru, Gautemala and Bolivia; countries where such systems have already achieved extensive presence. Each of these country case study presents:
- Evolution of the microfinance sector;
- Development of credit bureaus;
- Impact of credit bureaus on the microfinance sector;
- Perceptions of microfinance clients about the implications of credit reporting systems on them.
The paper finds that effective credit reporting systems can:
- Reduce adverse selection in recognizing borrower types;
- Increase competition among microfinance lenders as their best customers can now explore alternative sources of supply;
- Reduce lending costs as the risk of moral hazard is lowered;
- Reduce the risk of borrowers being over-extended in debts without the knowledge of the lenders;
- Reduce the ability of borrowers to pledge collaterals with multiple lenders beyond the market value.
The case studies suggest extraordinary changes in micro-lending practices. Borrowers have been able to graduate to formal sector lending as a consequence of penetration of credit reporting systems. However, there are a few constraints that need to be overcome before the benefits of credit reporting systems can be fully utilized:
- Multiplicity of credit bureaus operating under different rules and offering different services;
- Uneven regulation across institutions and countries;
- Incomplete client coverage;
- Incomplete understanding among microfinance sector borrowers of implications for them of partial credit reporting.
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