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by: J. D Von Pischke
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This book suggests how good loans can be made to individuals and
firms at the "frontier". This frontier is not geographic, but
market based. On one side are those parts of the legitimate economy
that are not usually considered creditworthy by formal financial
institutions, and on the other are the generally more prosperous
entities that do have access to formal finance. Good loans are loans
that are repaid according to the terms agreed on when they were issued.
It examines how lending at the frontier can be remunerative to
commercial banks, development banks and other development finance
agencies that retail credit and assume credit risk. Remunerative
lending is important because most lenders, regardless of their
ownership and institutional form, tend to avoid activities that are not
attractive. Unremunerative lending is transitory, unstable, and not
robust in the face of adversity. Credit markets function poorly when
lenders are not adequately rewarded. Experience at the frontier clearly
indicates that weak financial institutions do not do a good job serving
society in general and firms and individuals at the frontier in
particular. This book is intended for readers interested in the
relationship between finance and development at the firm and household
levels and in the use of credit by individuals in low-income
countries.
- Shipping Weight: 1.36 lbs (0.62 kgs)
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