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Understanding the Impact of Microcredit Expansions: A Bayesian Hierarchical Analysis of 7 Randomised Experiments

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  • Rachael Meager

Abstract

Bayesian hierarchical models are a methodology for aggregation and synthesis of data from heterogeneous settings, used widely in statistics and other disciplines. I apply this framework to the evidence from 7 randomized experiments of expanding access to microcredit to assess the general impact of the intervention on household outcomes and the heterogeneity in this impact across sites. The results suggest that the effect of microcredit is likely to be positive but small relative to control group average levels, and the possibility of a negative impact cannot be ruled out. By contrast, common meta-analytic methods that pool all the data without assessing the heterogeneity misleadingly produce "statistically significant" results in 2 of the 6 household outcomes. Standard pooling metrics for the studies indicate on average 60% pooling on the treatment effects, suggesting that the site-specific effects are reasonably externally valid, and thus informative for each other and for the general case. The cross-study heterogeneity is almost entirely generated by heterogeneous effects for the 27% households who previously operated businesses before microcredit expansion, although this group is likely to see much larger impacts overall. A Ridge regression procedure to assess the correlations between site-specific covariates and treatment effects indicates that the remaining heterogeneity is strongly correlated with differences in economic variables, but not with differences in study design protocols. The average interest rate and the average loan size have the strongest correlation with the treatment effects, and both are negative.

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  • Rachael Meager, 2015. "Understanding the Impact of Microcredit Expansions: A Bayesian Hierarchical Analysis of 7 Randomised Experiments," Papers 1506.06669, arXiv.org, revised Jul 2016.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:1506.06669
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    3. Emily Breza & Cynthia Kinnan, 2021. "Measuring the Equilibrium Impacts of Credit: Evidence from the Indian Microfinance Crisis," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, President and Fellows of Harvard College, vol. 136(3), pages 1447-1497.
    4. Evans, David K. & Popova, Anna, 2016. "Cost-Effectiveness Analysis in Development: Accounting for Local Costs and Noisy Impacts," World Development, Elsevier, vol. 77(C), pages 262-276.
    5. Domenica Federico & Andrea Calzolari & Antonella Notte & Lucia Poletti & Matteo Solivo & Giulio Tagliavini, 2022. "Contextualizing Microcredit in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Hungary: A Focus Group Exploration," American Journal of Economics and Business Administration, Science Publications, vol. 14(1), pages 31-43, August.
    6. Abhijit V. Banerjee & Rema Hanna & Gabriel E. Kreindler & Benjamin A. Olken, 2017. "Debunking the Stereotype of the Lazy Welfare Recipient: Evidence from Cash Transfer Programs," The World Bank Research Observer, World Bank, vol. 32(2), pages 155-184.

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