Paper
Credit Information Sharing Mechanisms in Mexico: Evaluation, Perspectives, and Effects on Firms' Access to Bank Credit
Has information sharing in Mexico led to a lack of financial access by small firms?
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29 pages
This paper describes the evolution, regulation and market structure of various information sharing mechanisms in Mexico.
The paper aims to:
- Provide a review of the theoretical background of information sharing;
- Describe and analyze the Mexican experience in this area;
- Present international experiences;
- Evaluate the effect that information sharing has had on firms' access to credit in Mexico
It states that:
- Sharing mechanisms alleviate the effects of asymmetric information in the credit market;
- The development of the credit market and information sharing mechanisms are closely related;
- In Mexico, information sharing has been limited because of the minor role that credit has played in the economy;
- The fast expansion of credit in the early 1990s, when there was only a limited coverage of the "Public Registry of Credit Information" (PRCI), made clear the need to develop mechanisms to share information;
- The regulation issued afterwards attempted to promote the entry of private credit bureaus;
- However, only one of them, the Credit Bureau (CB), has remained in the market;
- CB is owned by all commercial Mexican banks, and hence, informs them and meets the supply of their demand for reports.
The paper shows that:
- The quality of information that the CB provides is better than it was in the days before the regulation;
- Wider information has resulted in less access to bank credit for small and medium-sized firms.
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