Are competitive microfinance services worth regulating? Evidence from microfinance institutions in Sub-Saharan Africa
Are competitive microfinance services worth regulating? Evidence from microfinance institutions in Sub-Saharan Africa
In recent years, there is increasing appetite for regulation of microfinance services after the 2008 financial crisis. Policy questions such as whether competitive microfinance institution (MFI) requires strong regulation to reduce, for example, credit risk or competition and regulation operate in the opposite direction, which each tends to dampen the effect of the other, are an empirical issue that this paper provides answers based on data on Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) for the period 1995–2015, utilizing panel data approaches. Finding from the study indicates that low competition increases credit risk among MFIs in SSA, which regulation helps reduce such behaviour. The effect of regulation on credit risk is conditional on the level of competition, at the first percentile of competition (imply more competition); regulation does not reduce credit risk behaviour of MFIs but does at competition level above the 25th percentile (imply less competition). Regulation, on the other hand, does not affect operational risk at any level of competition. These findings have implications for policy formulation on the regulation and operations of MFIs in SSA. Our findings suggest that the MFI industry could be regulated efficiently if policymakers develop policies targeted at reducing credit risk exposures of MFIs than their exposure to operational risk.
Competition, financial services, microfinance, portfolio risk, regulation
Karimu, Amin
ef10996e-3322-4da5-a6ac-107bd6fc7ae1
Salia, Samuel
05cdade3-650f-4c27-a0e8-544c0af698d5
Hussain, Javed G.
ebecb21e-08ba-42c1-a401-ab7aa52e6975
Tingbani, Ishmael
e6b2741a-d792-4adf-84cc-a2f64d5545ca
Karimu, Amin
ef10996e-3322-4da5-a6ac-107bd6fc7ae1
Salia, Samuel
05cdade3-650f-4c27-a0e8-544c0af698d5
Hussain, Javed G.
ebecb21e-08ba-42c1-a401-ab7aa52e6975
Tingbani, Ishmael
e6b2741a-d792-4adf-84cc-a2f64d5545ca
Karimu, Amin, Salia, Samuel, Hussain, Javed G. and Tingbani, Ishmael
(2019)
Are competitive microfinance services worth regulating? Evidence from microfinance institutions in Sub-Saharan Africa.
International Journal of Finance and Economics.
(doi:10.1002/ijfe.1800).
Abstract
In recent years, there is increasing appetite for regulation of microfinance services after the 2008 financial crisis. Policy questions such as whether competitive microfinance institution (MFI) requires strong regulation to reduce, for example, credit risk or competition and regulation operate in the opposite direction, which each tends to dampen the effect of the other, are an empirical issue that this paper provides answers based on data on Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) for the period 1995–2015, utilizing panel data approaches. Finding from the study indicates that low competition increases credit risk among MFIs in SSA, which regulation helps reduce such behaviour. The effect of regulation on credit risk is conditional on the level of competition, at the first percentile of competition (imply more competition); regulation does not reduce credit risk behaviour of MFIs but does at competition level above the 25th percentile (imply less competition). Regulation, on the other hand, does not affect operational risk at any level of competition. These findings have implications for policy formulation on the regulation and operations of MFIs in SSA. Our findings suggest that the MFI industry could be regulated efficiently if policymakers develop policies targeted at reducing credit risk exposures of MFIs than their exposure to operational risk.
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Accepted/In Press date: 13 September 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 26 November 2019
Keywords:
Competition, financial services, microfinance, portfolio risk, regulation
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Local EPrints ID: 443838
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/443838
ISSN: 1076-9307
PURE UUID: 5d7d10d3-9c52-4f3a-90db-4e66dfe6afb9
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Date deposited: 14 Sep 2020 16:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:02
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Author:
Amin Karimu
Author:
Samuel Salia
Author:
Javed G. Hussain
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