Abstract

Following recent literature, we hypothesise that saving and borrowing among microfinance clients are substitutes, satisfying the same underlying demand for a regular deposit schedule and a lumpsum withdrawal. We test this using a framed field experiment among women participating in group lending in rural Pakistan. The experiment — inspired by the rotating structure of a ROSCA — involves randomly offering credit products and savings products to the same subject pool. We find high demand both for credit products and for savings products, with the same individuals often accepting both a credit product and a savings product over the three experiment waves. This behaviour can be rationalised by a model in which individuals prefer lump-sum payments (for example, to finance a lumpy expenditure), and in which individuals struggle to hold savings over time. We complement our experimental estimates with a structural analysis, in which different types of participants face different kinds of constraints. Our structural framework rationalises the behaviour of 75% of participants; of these ‘rationalised’ participants, we estimate that two-thirds have high demand for lump-sum payments coupled with savings difficulties. These results imply that the distinction between microlending and microsaving is illusory; participants value a mechanism for regular deposits and lump-sum payments, whether that is structured as a credit or debt contract.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call