Working Paper

The Threat of Exclusion and Implicit Contracting

Martin Brown, Marta Serra-Garcia
CESifo, Munich, 2016

CESifo Working Paper No. 6092

Implicit contracts can mitigate moral hazard in labor, credit and product markets. The enforcement mechanism underlying an implicit contract is the threat of exclusion: the agent fears that he will lose future income if the principal breaks off the relationship. This threat may be very weak in environments where an agent can appropriate income-generating resources provided by the principal. For example, in credit markets with weak creditor protection borrowers may be able to appropriate borrowed funds and generate investment income without requiring further loans. We examine implicit contracting in a lending experiment where the threat of exclusion is exogenously varied. We find that weak exclusion undermines implicit contracting: it leads to a more frequent breakdown of credit relationships as well as to smaller loans.

CESifo Category
Behavioural Economics
Empirical and Theoretical Methods
Keywords: Economics: microeconomic behavior, behavior and behavioral decision making, Finance: corporate finance, implicit contracting
JEL Classification: C730, G210, O160, F210, F340