Ulf von Lilienfeld‐Toal, Dilip Mookherjee, Sujata Visaria
It is generally presumed that stronger legal enforcement of lender rights increases credit access for all borrowers because it expands the set of incentive compatible loan contracts. This result relies on an assumption that the supply of credit is infinitely elastic. In contrast, with inelastic supply, stronger enforcement generates general equilibrium effects that may reduce credit access for small borrowers and expand it for wealthy borrowers. In a firm‐level panel, we find evidence that an Indian judicial reform that increased banks' ability to recover nonperforming loans had such an adverse distributive impact.
MLA
Lilienfeld‐Toal, Ulf von, et al. “The Distributive Impact of Reforms in Credit Enforcement: Evidence From Indian Debt Recovery Tribunals.” Econometrica, vol. 80, .no 2, Econometric Society, 2012, pp. 497-558, https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA9038
Chicago
Lilienfeld‐Toal, Ulf von, Dilip Mookherjee, and Sujata Visaria. “The Distributive Impact of Reforms in Credit Enforcement: Evidence From Indian Debt Recovery Tribunals.” Econometrica, 80, .no 2, (Econometric Society: 2012), 497-558. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA9038
APA
Lilienfeld‐Toal, U. v., Mookherjee, D., & Visaria, S. (2012). The Distributive Impact of Reforms in Credit Enforcement: Evidence From Indian Debt Recovery Tribunals. Econometrica, 80(2), 497-558. https://doi.org/10.3982/ECTA9038
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