Working Paper

When Pro-Poor Microcredit Institutions Favor Richer Borrowers - A Moral Hazard Story

Sara Biancini, David Ettinger, Baptiste Venet
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 8893

We suggest an explanation for the existence of “mission drift”, the tendency for Microfinance Institutions (MFIs) to lend money to wealthier borrowers rather than to the very poor. We focus on the relationship between MFIs and external funding institutions. We assume that both the MFIs and the funding institutions are pro-poor and agree on the optimal proportion of funds to be granted to the poorer borrower. However, asymmetric information on the effort chosen by the MFI to identify higher quality projects may increase the share of loans attributed to wealthier borrowers. This occurs because funding institutions have to build incentives for MFIs, creating a trade off between the quality of the funded projects and the attribution of loans to poorer borrowers.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Industrial Organisation
Keywords: microfinance, mission drift, moral hazard
JEL Classification: O120, O160, G210