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Bad Taste: Gender Discrimination in the Consumer Credit Market

Author

Listed:
  • Montoya, Ana María
  • Parrado, Eric
  • Solís, Alex
  • Undurraga, Raimundo

Abstract

When evaluating observably similar loan applications from men and women, do loan officers favor men? This paper randomly assigned loan requests of variable amounts to a balanced sample of male and female prospective borrowers who then submitted the assigned loan requests to randomly assigned loan officers in Chile. It is found that loan requests submitted by women are 14.8 percent less likely to be approved compared to otherwise equivalent loan requests submitted by men, even though official statistics show that women in Chile have higher repayment rates than men. In a corollary experiment, the paper explores whether gender discrimination is due to inaccurate statistical discrimination among loan officers, for which a treatment is implemented aimed at “correcting” loan officers’ biased beliefs through the provision of actual information on the repayment performance of male and female borrowers. The treatment is found to be ineffective, suggesting taste-based discrimination. By eliciting gender preferences among loan officers, it is shown that male-female differences in approval rates are 30 to 32 percent larger among pro-male officers relative to not-pro-male peers, with most of the effect driven by male pro-male officers. Finally, a model-based test showing that gender discrimination decreases with the requested loan amount is also consistent with the taste-based hypothesis. It is estimated that 9.9 percent of expected bank profits are not capitalized due to taste-based discrimination (equivalent to annual foregone profits of US$ 13,400 per case), an inefficiency cost equal to the annual wage bill of 1,500 loan officers or 18 percent of all loan officers working in the Chilean banking system.

Suggested Citation

  • Montoya, Ana María & Parrado, Eric & Solís, Alex & Undurraga, Raimundo, 2020. "Bad Taste: Gender Discrimination in the Consumer Credit Market," IDB Publications (Working Papers) 10432, Inter-American Development Bank.
  • Handle: RePEc:idb:brikps:10432
    DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0001921
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. J. Michelle Brock & Ralph De Haas, 2023. "Discriminatory Lending: Evidence from Bankers in the Lab," American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, American Economic Association, vol. 15(2), pages 31-68, April.
    2. Vojtech Bartos & Silvia Castro & Kristina Czura & Timm Opitz, 2023. "Gendered Access to Finance: The Role of Team Formation, Idea Quality, and Implementation Constraints in Business Evaluations," Rationality and Competition Discussion Paper Series 473, CRC TRR 190 Rationality and Competition.
    3. Morazzoni, Marta & Sy, Andrea, 2022. "Female entrepreneurship, financial frictions and capital misallocation in the US," Journal of Monetary Economics, Elsevier, vol. 129(C), pages 93-118.

    More about this item

    Keywords

    Gender discrimination; Consumer loans; Gender preferences; Genderbelief;
    All these keywords.

    JEL classification:

    • J16 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Demographic Economics - - - Economics of Gender; Non-labor Discrimination
    • G20 - Financial Economics - - Financial Institutions and Services - - - General
    • J71 - Labor and Demographic Economics - - Labor Discrimination - - - Hiring and Firing

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