Does Participation in Productive Associations Signal Trust and Creditworthiness? [electronic resource] : Evidence for Nicaragua / Angel-Urdinola, Diego F.

By: Angel-Urdinola, Diego FContributor(s): Angel-Urdinola, Diego F | Molina, EzequielMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, D.C., The World Bank, 2008Description: 1 online resource (21 p.)Subject(s): Collective | Collective action | Collective action problem | Communities & Human Settlements | Corporate Law | Debt Markets | Finance and Financial Sector Development | Housing and Human Habitats | Individuals | Insurance and Risk Mitigation | Labor Policies | Law and Development | Municipality | Principal-agent | Principal-agent problems | Proxy | Public firms | Social Protections and Labor | UnionsAdditional physical formats: Angel-Urdinola, Diego F.: Does Participation in Productive Associations Signal Trust and Creditworthiness?Online resources: Click here to access online Abstract: This article studies the extent to which participation in productive associations in Nicaragua contributes to increase individuals' access to social programs and credit services. By participating in productive associations, individuals give a good signal to firms and are rewarded with better transactions and more access to the services they provide, ceteris paribus. Estimates using 2005 data indicate that households that participate in productive associations display higher access to credit and to social programs that promote investment. Additionally, participation in productive associations is weakly associated to more favorable credit outcomes among those households that receive loans, such as lower interest rates and a lower probability of wanting more credit than what was accessible to them.
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This article studies the extent to which participation in productive associations in Nicaragua contributes to increase individuals' access to social programs and credit services. By participating in productive associations, individuals give a good signal to firms and are rewarded with better transactions and more access to the services they provide, ceteris paribus. Estimates using 2005 data indicate that households that participate in productive associations display higher access to credit and to social programs that promote investment. Additionally, participation in productive associations is weakly associated to more favorable credit outcomes among those households that receive loans, such as lower interest rates and a lower probability of wanting more credit than what was accessible to them.

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