Department of Economics, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USA.
Science. 2011 Jun 10;332(6035):1278-84. doi: 10.1126/science.1200138.
Microcredit institutions spend billions of dollars fighting poverty by making small loans primarily to female entrepreneurs. Proponents argue that microcredit mitigates market failures, spurs micro-enterprise growth, and boosts borrowers' well-being. We tested these hypotheses with the use of an innovative, replicable experimental design that randomly assigned individual liability microloans (of $225 on average) to 1601 individuals in the Philippines through credit scoring. After 11 to 22 months, we found evidence consistent with unmet demand at the current price (a roughly 60% annualized interest rate): Net borrowing increased in the treatment group relative to controls. However, the number of business activities and employees in the treatment group decreased relative to controls, and subjective well-being declined slightly. We also found little evidence that treatment effects were more pronounced for women. However, we did find that microloans increase ability to cope with risk, strengthen community ties, and increase access to informal credit. Thus, microcredit here may work, but through channels different from those often hypothesized by its proponents.
小额信贷机构通过向女性企业家发放小额贷款(主要是小额贷款)来花费数十亿美元来消除贫困。支持者认为,小额信贷可以减轻市场失灵,促进微型企业的发展,并提高借款人的福祉。我们使用创新的可复制实验设计来测试这些假设,该设计通过信用评分向菲律宾的 1601 人平均发放了 225 美元的个人连带责任小额贷款。在 11 至 22 个月后,我们发现了与当前价格下未满足的需求(约 60%的年化利率)一致的证据:与对照组相比,治疗组的净借款有所增加。但是,与对照组相比,治疗组的企业活动数量和员工人数减少,主观幸福感略有下降。我们也几乎没有发现治疗效果对女性更为明显的证据。但是,我们确实发现小额贷款可以提高应对风险的能力,增强社区联系并增加获得非正式信贷的机会。因此,这里的小额信贷可能有效,但通过的渠道与小额信贷的支持者通常假设的渠道不同。