Digital Collateral
Paul Gertler, Brett Green, Catherine Wolfram
A new form of secured lending using “digital collateral” has recently emerged, most prominently in low- and middle-income countries.
A new form of secured lending using “digital collateral” has recently emerged, most prominently in low- and middle-income countries. Digital collateral relies on lockout technology, which allows the lender to temporarily disable the flow value of the collateral to the borrower without physically repossessing it. We explore this new form of credit in a model and a field experiment using school-fee loans digitally secured with a solar home system. Securing a loan with digital collateral drastically reduced default rates (by 19 percentage points) and increased the lender’s rate of return (by 49 percentage points). Using a variant of the Karlan and Zinman (2009) methodology, we decompose the total effect on repayment and find that roughly two-thirds is attributable to moral hazard, and one-third to adverse selection. In addition, access to digitally secured school-fee loans significantly increased school enrollment and school-related expenditures without detrimental effects on households’ balance sheets.
Increasing Degree Attainment among Low-Income Students: The Role of Intensive Advising and College Quality
Andrew Barr, Benjamin Castleman
The Long-Term Effects of Career Guidance in High School and Student Financial Aid: Evidence from a Randomized Experiment
Laetitia Renée
On the doorstep of adulthood: Entrepreneurship and fertility of young women in Tanzania
Lars Ivar Oppedal Berge, Kjetil Bjorvatn, Fortunata Makene, Linda Helgesson Sekei, Vincent Somville, Bertil Tungodden
The Impact of Being Denied a Wanted Abortion on Women and Their Children
Juliana Londoño-Vélez, Estefanía Saravia