Paper
Rural Financial Markets in Developing Countries
Role of financial intermediaries, competition and regulations in shaping changing structures
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88 pages
This paper attempts to provide a framework within which the evolution of financial intermediation in rural economies can be understood.
The paper briefly discusses the prominent features of rural financial markets such as:
- Fragmented or absent markets;
- Government interventions.
The paper discusses the models of rural financial markets like:
- Complete market benchmark;
- Empirical tests of efficient risk sharing;
- Consequences of imperfect financial markets;
- Contracting under asymmetric information and imperfect enforcement;
- Moral hazard;
- Multi-period and repeated contracts, limited commitment, and reputation;
- Limited liability, collateral and its substitutes;
- Property rights and credit supply.
The paper focuses on the role of rural financial intermediaries like:
- Crowding-in versus crowding-out of financial services;
- Group loans, cooperatives, ROSCAs, and mutuals;
- Policies.
The paper concludes that:
- From a wide variety of rural settings, it is evident that financial markets are highly fragmented and imperfect;
- The main causes of imperfections afflicting rural financial markets are the difficulties that arise in transactions of contingent promises when information is asymmetric and enforcement of contracts is not assured;
- There is a manifest need for careful state attention to institutions that support rural financial intermediation;
- New research to focus on rural financial markets must be the issues that surround the development of these intuitions of property rights, legal enforcement of financial contracts, and information diffusion.
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