Abstract

Credit market development requires appropriate credit assessment and default policies. This paper aims to examine the impact of household characteristics on mortgage default, using survey data collected from Ghanaian financial institutions.,Data were gathered using semi-structured questionnaires from customers of five universal banks in Ghana. A logistic regression was used to model the determinants of credit default propensity.,Contrary to established knowledge, the study shows that females are more likely to default on credit than their male counterparts. This is even more likely if the female is older, unmarried, divorced and financially illiterate and has lower educational attainments. These factors are associated with lower earning capacity, which increases default tendencies. The findings confirm that price instability (typified by excessive movements in inflation and exchange rates in addition to low national savings rate) are adversely linked to credit defaults. Borrower’s perception of constraints to credit access (such as collateral requirements, interest rate and loan size) influence credit default. Banks should be encouraged to invest in the financial literacy skills development of their customers to mitigate credit default tendencies.,The study is of practical value to credit officers and the development of the credit market in Ghana. A novel model is presented for assessing credit applications and developing credit default policies.,The research findings have not only expanded the frontiers of literature but also empirically examined the determinants of credit default propensity, which provides a basis for developing and improving credit default policy in the credit market.

Highlights

  • Mortgage financing enable individuals and households with limited financial resources to access homeownership (Karanja, 2013) through the flow of funds to end users (Goodman and Ho, 2004; Karanja, 2013)

  • This paper examines the impact of household characteristics on mortgage default using survey data collected from financial institutions in Ghana

  • The results suggest that household size, first degree holders, self-employed borrowers and private sector workers are generally negatively correlated with mortgage default propensity

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Summary

Introduction

Mortgage financing enable individuals and households with limited financial resources to access homeownership (Karanja, 2013) through the flow of funds to end users (Goodman and Ho, 2004; Karanja, 2013). Existing empirical work attributes these wide variations to differences in creditor rights protection, credit information sharing and macroeconomic stability (Warnock and Warnock, 2008). Macroeconomic bottlenecks such as high and volatile inflation and high unemployment levels have been problematic in terms of pricing and affordability (Goodman and Ho, 2004; Karanja, 2013). Existing studies suggest an incompatibility between the conditions of low-income groups (LIG) and the requirements of formal housing financiers (Keys et al, 2014; Kamete, 2007). According to Tunstall et al (2013), the middle-income group spend an average of 30 percent of their income on accommodation while the LIG spends 56 percent of income on accommodation

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