Abstract
Using a unique, hand‐collected database of 389 small loans granted by a French social bank dealing with genuinely small, informationally opaque businesses (mainly social enterprises), our study highlights the relevance of including soft information (especially on management quality) to improve credit default prediction. Comparing our findings with those of previous studies also reveals that the more opaque the borrower, the higher the predictive value of soft information in comparison with hard. Finally, a cost‐benefit analysis shows that including soft information is economically valuable once collection costs have been accounted for, albeit to a moderate extent.
Published Version
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