Reputation and Credit Market Formation: How Relational Incentives and Legal Contract Enforcement Interact
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_534902C223A5
Type
Report: a report published by a school or other institution, usually numbered within a series.
Publication sub-type
Working paper: Working papers contain results presented by the author. Working papers aim to stimulate discussions between scientists with interested parties, they can also be the basis to publish articles in specialized journals
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Reputation and Credit Market Formation: How Relational Incentives and Legal Contract Enforcement Interact
Institution details
Forschungsinstitut zur Zukunft der Arbeit Institute for the Study of Labor
Issued date
2009
Abstract
The evidence suggests that relational contracting and legal rules play an important role in credit markets but on the basis of the prevailing field data it is difficult to pin down their causal impact. Here we show experimentally that relational incentives are a powerful causal determinant for the existence and performance of credit markets. In fact, in the absence of legal enforcement and reputation formation opportunities the credit market breaks down almost completely while if reputation formation is possible a stable credit market emerges even in the absence of legal enforcement of debt repayment. Introducing legal enforcement of repayments causes a further significant increase in credit market trading but has only a surprisingly small impact on overall efficiency. The reason is that legal enforcement of debt repayments weakens relational incentives and exacerbates another moral hazard problem in credit markets – the choice of inefficient high-risk projects.
Create date
19/10/2017 13:30
Last modification date
21/08/2019 5:14