TY - JOUR
T1 - Credit participation and constraints of the poor in peri-urban areas, Vietnam
T2 - A micro-econometric analysis of a household survey
AU - Doan, Tinh
AU - Tuyen, Tran Quang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, Wroclaw University of Economics. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - This paper uses a dataset collected from peri-urban areas of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam to examine how the poor use their loans, and factors affecting their credit participation and credit constraints. The paper finds that the presence of many commercial banks in the areas does not help the poor, instead the poor rely heavily on informal credit. Loans in the periurban areas are mainly used for non-productive purposes, which stresses the importance of consumption smoothing. Better community relationships and interpersonal trust in morerural wards help households to access to credit. In urban areas, the poor rely more upon subsidized funds. A closer look at specified microcredit sources reveals that household behaviour differs in each market segment. Furthermore, the poor are highly credit-constrained. Wealthier-asset households among the poor appear to be less credit-constrained. The likelihood of credit constraints increases with the distance to the nearest banks, which suggests that credit supplyside intervention could help overcome credit constraints. Overall, the poor in urban areas are more credit-constrained because of exclusion by commercial banks and weaker interpersonal trust.
AB - This paper uses a dataset collected from peri-urban areas of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam to examine how the poor use their loans, and factors affecting their credit participation and credit constraints. The paper finds that the presence of many commercial banks in the areas does not help the poor, instead the poor rely heavily on informal credit. Loans in the periurban areas are mainly used for non-productive purposes, which stresses the importance of consumption smoothing. Better community relationships and interpersonal trust in morerural wards help households to access to credit. In urban areas, the poor rely more upon subsidized funds. A closer look at specified microcredit sources reveals that household behaviour differs in each market segment. Furthermore, the poor are highly credit-constrained. Wealthier-asset households among the poor appear to be less credit-constrained. The likelihood of credit constraints increases with the distance to the nearest banks, which suggests that credit supplyside intervention could help overcome credit constraints. Overall, the poor in urban areas are more credit-constrained because of exclusion by commercial banks and weaker interpersonal trust.
KW - Credit constraints
KW - Credit participation
KW - Peri-urban
KW - The poor
KW - Vietnam
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85019019023&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.15611/aoe.2015.1.07
DO - 10.15611/aoe.2015.1.07
M3 - Article
SN - 1233-5835
VL - 34
SP - 175
EP - 200
JO - Argumenta Oeconomica
JF - Argumenta Oeconomica
IS - 1
ER -