From tackling poverty to achieving financial inclusionThe changing role of British credit unions in low income communities
Index of Financial Inclusion
On the Economics of discrimination in Credit Markets
This paper develops a general equilibrium model of both taste-based and statistical discrimination in credit markets. We find that both types of discrimination have similar predictions for intergroup differences in loan terms. The commonly held view has been that if there exists taste-based discrimination, loans approved to minority borrowers would have higher expected profitability than to majorities with comparable credit background. We show that the validity of this profitability view depends crucially on how expected loan profitability is measured. We also show that there must exist taste-based discrimination if loans to minority borrowers have higher expected rate of return or lower expected rate of default loss than to majorities with the same exogenous characteristics at the time of loan origination. Empirical evidence on expected rate of default loss cannot reject the null hypothesis of non-existence of taste-based discrimination.
Studio per una migliore integrazione finanziaria degli immigrati
Financial services provision and prevention of financial exclusion: a Eurobarometer report
MICROCRÉDITOS PARA LA INCLUSIÓN
Money laundering control and suppression of financing of terrorism: Some thoughts on the impact of customer due diligence measures on financial exclus
Mission Connected Investment emerging opportunities for mission-connected investment
Full Disclosure why bank transparency matters: a comparison of the US and the UK
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