Abstract

By designing credit contracts with inversely related interest rates and collateral, banks can overcome the problems of adverse selection and moral hazard when there is an informational asymmetry in competitive credit markets. One salient result points out that, if borrowers’ insufficient endowments of wealth cause a binding collateral constraint, a credit rationing equilibrium arises because of collateral’s inability to achieve perfect sorting. The purpose of this paper is to examine the consequences of government loan guarantees on equilibrium credit contracts and economic welfare. More specifically, the effects of loan guarantees on interest rates, collateral, and credit rationing were studied. Our results suggest that government loan guarantees should target high-risk entrepreneurs. Loan guarantees targeting high-risk entrepreneurs reduce a pledge of collateral in credit contracts, drop social cost, and increase economic welfare. Under the circumstances that borrowers’ insufficient wealth causes a binding collateral constraint, loan guarantees targeting high-risk entrepreneurs alleviate the problem of credit rationing and improve economic welfare.

Highlights

  • In a loan market, a lender provides funds and a borrower pays them back over time, plus additional interest payments that provide a return to the lender, and represent the risk of the borrower defaulting on the loan

  • In Spain, close to 99% of all firms are small and medium enterprises (SMEs); studying the impact of loan guarantee programs on firm performance is a promising topic [7]. Within such a credit market of informational asymmetry and possible credit rationing equilibrium, what is the role of government loan guarantee programs on equilibrium credit contracts and economic welfare? This paper examines the effects of loan guarantee programs on the determination of the credit contracts, that is, the loan interest rates, the amount of collateral, and the probability of granting credit

  • Loan guarantees targeting high-risk entrepreneurs reduce a pledge of collateral in credit contracts, lower social cost, and increase economic welfare

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Summary

Introduction

A lender provides funds and a borrower pays them back over time, plus additional interest payments that provide a return to the lender, and represent the risk of the borrower defaulting on the loan. In Spain, close to 99% of all firms are SMEs; studying the impact of loan guarantee programs on firm performance is a promising topic [7] Within such a credit market of informational asymmetry and possible credit rationing equilibrium, what is the role of government loan guarantee programs on equilibrium credit contracts and economic welfare? This paper examines the effects of loan guarantee programs on the determination of the credit contracts, that is, the loan interest rates, the amount of collateral, and the probability of granting credit It explores the comparative welfare properties of equilibrium without and with loan guarantees, and provides an answer to whom loan guarantees should target from the welfare perspectives.

The Private Economy and a Benchmark
Asymmetric Information and Government Loan Guarantees
Loan Guarantees Target Low-Risk Entrepreneurs
Loan Guarantees Target High-Risk Entrepreneurs
Binding Collateral Constraints
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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