Discussion paper

DP5410 Consumer Lending When Lenders are More Sophisticated Than Households

We present a simple model of household (or consumer) lending in which, building on past information and local expertise, an incumbent lender has an information advantage both vis-a-vis potential competitors and households. We show that if the adverse selection problem faced by other lenders is sufficiently severe, the incumbent preserves his monopoly power and may engage in too aggressive lending. The incumbent lender may then approve credit even against a household?s best interest. In contrast, with effective competition it may now be less informed lenders who lend too aggressively to households who were rejected by the incumbent, though this only occurs if households 'naively' ignore the information contained in their previous rejection. We find that competition may also distort lending as less informed lenders try to free ride on the incumbent?s superior screening ability.

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Citation

Inderst, R (2006), ‘DP5410 Consumer Lending When Lenders are More Sophisticated Than Households‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 5410. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp5410