UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS HO CHI MINH CITY VIETNAM INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL STUDIES THE HAGUE THE NETHERLANDS VIETNAM NETHERLANDS PROGRAMME FOR M A IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS HOUSEHOLD ACCESS TO INFORMAL RURAL[.]
Trang 1VIETNAM - NETHERLANDS PROGRAMME FOR M.A IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
HOUSEHOLD ACCESS TO INFORMAL
AN ANALYSIS FROM VHLSS 2008
By
LE ANH THU
MASTER OF ARTS IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
HO CHI MINH CITY, August 2012
Trang 2UNIVERSITY OF ECONOMICS INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL STUDIES
VIETNAM - NETHERLANDS PROGRAMME FOR M.A IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
HOUSEHOLD ACCESS TO INFORMAL
RURAL CREDIT:
AN ANALYSIS FROM VHLSS 2008
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
MASTER OF ARTS IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
Trang 3This thesis would not have been accomplished without the kind assistance and enthusiastic guidance of several individuals who have in one way or another contributed toward to the formation and fulfillment of this paper
First of all, I would like to express my utmost gratitude to Dr Nguyen Trong Hoai and Dr Pham Khanh Nam for sharing their practical profound insights and steadfast encouragement in term of theoretical literature and techniques that are helpful to this study
I would like to express my special thanks to Dr Tran Tien Khai and Dr Ha Thuc Vien who have inspired initiatives and passion of rural credit in me to carry out this interesting study
I would like to express my deep and sincere gratitude to Dr Le Van Chon for his scientific guidance, patient encouragement and invaluable advice, which he has provided throughout the time of preparation and accomplishment of this paper
I sincerely would like to thank all my loved classmates in class MDE17 and staff in the VNP office, who always give me their restless assistance when I was in trouble; especially Nguyen Thi Thuy Thanh, Dinh Thi Thu and Phan Thach Truc for creating motivation for me due to their brilliant talent
I would like to express my special massive thanks to my bosses MA Nguyen Duc The and Mrs Van Thi Le who have given me opportunities and spiritual assistance to accomplish this study
Last but not least, I must express my most gratitude to my parents and my wife, Bui Thi Thanh Thuy, for their enduring understanding and spiritual assistance which help me overcome the hard times
Trang 4The purpose of this paper is to examine household access to informal financial markets in Vietnamese rural areas It applies the theoretical framework of asymmetric information to investigate the rural credit markets in Vietnam
This paper explores determinants that influence loan amounts borrowed by rural households from the informal sources using the Heckman two-step model and the data in the Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey which was carried out in the year 2008 It is found that household expenditure, household assets and number
of working earners strongly and positively impacts on probability of credit access; gender of household head highly negatively influence credit accessibility Notwithstanding, informal loan appears almost in household’s activities for both consumption and production purposes, they still mainly rely on relationship of friends and relatives rather than fully make use of informal credit institutions and other sources
Key words: Informal rural credit; cross section; Heckman model; VHLSS 2008;
Vietnam
Trang 5ACKNOWLEDGEMENT i
ABSTRACT ii
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 Problem statement 1
1.2 Research objectives 3
1.3 Research questions 3
1.4 Justification of the thesis 4
1.5 Organization of the thesis 4
CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW 5
2.1 History and origin of the rural credit 5
2.2 Theoretical review of rural credit markets 6
2.2.1 The theory of monopoly 7
2.2.2 Asymmetric Information 9
2.2.3 Indirect screening mechanism 9
2.2.4 Direct screening mechanism 10
2.3 Empirical studies 11
2.4 Conceptual framework 19
2.5 Chapter summary 22
CHAPTER 3: DATA AND RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 24
3.1 Background of rural credit markets in Vietnam 24
3.2 Data 28
3.3 Research methodology 29
3.3.1 Descriptive analysis 29
3.3.2 Econometric model 29
3.4 Chapter summary 32
CHAPTER 4: ANALYSIS RESULTS 34
4.1 Rural credit markets 34
4.2 Intention of loans 35
4.3 Different loan amounts analysis 36
4.4 Descriptive statistical analyses 38
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Trang 64.4.2 Bivariate analysis 39
4.4.2.1 The nexus of loan amount and age of household head 40
4.4.2.2 The nexus of loan amount and gender of household head 41
4.4.2.3 The nexus of loan amount and education of house head 41
4.4.2.4 The nexus of average loan amount and number of dependents 42
4.4.2.5 The nexus of average loan amount and number of adults 43
4.4.2.6 The nexus of average loan amount and expenditure 44
4.4.2.7 The nexus of loan amount and total value of asset 44
4.4.2.8 The nexus of average loan amount and expense on livestock 45
4.4.2.9 The nexus of average loan amount and cultivated areas 46
4.5 Empirical results 47
4.6 Chapter summary 51
CHAPTER 5: CONCLUSIONS & POLICY IMPLICATIONS 53
5.1 Conclusions 53
5.2 Policy implications 54
5.3 Limitations and directions for further studies 55
5.3.1 Limitations 55
5.3.2 Directions for further studies 55
REFERENCES 57
APPENDICES 60
Trang 7Table 2.1: Early empirical studies on rural credit 15
Table 3.1: Sample size by region 22
Table 3.2: List of variables 32
Table 4.1: Status of household’s access to rural credit markets 34
Table 4.2: Loan distribution over financial sources 35
Table 4.3: Loan distribution over loan intention 36
Table 4.4: Different amount of loan on rural markets 37
Table 4.5: Different loan amount on the informal sector 38
Table 4.6: Univariate analysis 39
Table 4.7: The Heckman two-step model for informal loan amount 47
LIST OF TABLE
Trang 8Figure 2.1: The vicious circle of poverty 5
Figure 2.2: Unorganized financial markets in LDCs 7
Figure 2.3: Monopoly & competitive markets 8
Figure 3.1: Rural loan in the formal sector 25
Figure 3.2: Rural loan in the semi-formal sector 26
Figure 3.3: Rural loan in the informal sector 27
Figure 3.4: Sample size 29
Figure 4.1: Gender of household heads 39
Figure 4.2: The nexus of average loan amount and age of household head 40
Figure 4.3: The nexus of average loan amount and gender of household head 41
Figure 4.4: The nexus of loan amount and education of household head 42
Figure 4.5: The nexus of average loan amount and number of dependents 43
Figure 4.6: The nexus of average loan amount and number of adults 43
Figure 4.7: The nexus of average loan amount and expenditure 44
Figure 4.8: The nexus of loan amount and total value of asset 45
Figure 4.9: The nexus of loan amount and expense on livestock 45
Figure 4.10: The nexus of loan amount and cultivated areas 46
LIST OF FIGURES
Trang 9CCF: The Central Credit Fund
LDCs: Less developed countries
GSO: The General Statistics Office of Vietnam
HH: Household
ROSCAs: Rotating Savings and Credits Associations
OLS: Ordinary Least Squares
PCFs: The People’s Credit Funds
SBV: The State Bank of Vietnam
VBARD: The Vietnam Bank of Agriculture and Rural Development VBP: The Vietnam Bank for the Poor (formerly)
VBSP: Vietnam Bank for Social Policies
VFA: The Vietnamese Farmers’ Association
VHLSS: Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey
VWU: The Vietnamese Women’s Union
WB: The World Bank
ABBREVIATION
Trang 10CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
1.1 Problem statement
The absence of formal credit sources for the rural household is a critical constraint to agricultural development in many developing countries It is due to information asymmetry in the relationship of lenders and borrowers leading to problems of adverse selection and moral hazard (Stiglitz & Weiss, 1981), (Jung, 2000); the consequence is often that the rural lending is perceptibly undetermined Moreover the imperfect information appears in many government policies supporting credit for rural households The formal credit does not satisfy demand for financing projects or expenditure (George & James, 2010) In addition, formal institutions respond late to small loan amount (Lipton, 1976) Therefore, borrowers seek credit in the informal sector (private moneylender, parents, relatives, friends, etc.) to satisfy their production and consumption (Pham & Izumida, 2002), Mpuga (2010)
The poor household in rural areas inevitably relies mainly on the expensive informal credit to finance their production, expenditure, tuition fee, wedding, funeral etc; for that reason informal credit plays a crucial role in rural development with evidences from (Adams & Graham, 1981), (George & James, 2010)
The operations of informal financial sectors are concerned with many diversified aspects including the supply of rural formal credit market is not able to satisfy the growing demand of rural households and many borrowers turn to informal credit markets for their production and consumption needs (Takashi, 2009); almost characteristics of the rural farm households are risky and uncertainty, usually dealing with small scale of debt, while the supply of the formal sector often concentrates on large scale projects (Barslund & Tarp, 2008), (Takashi, 2009); transaction cost of the formal credit is higher than the cost implied so informal lenders provide financial services with the competitive cost (Adams & Graham, 1981), (Guirkinger, 2008), (Mpuga, 2010)
Trang 11Rural farm households, especially in LDCs, do not generate enough affordable finance to break the vicious circle of poverty One of the factors constituting key obstacles could be that agricultural product activities are highly dependent upon weather and climate conditions; and there is few credit institutions reaching the rural poor In Vietnam, there are about 70 percent of the population still lives in rural areas and depending on agriculture mainly for their livelihood (FAO & Shoji, 2011) A renovation for transforming from the agricultural sector to a more modern society remains a challenge for Vietnam To get promotion of agricultural production and transformation is to start from how to access credit for poor households who lacking of collateral, educated and information is a key ingredient;
it is also the first objective of any poverty oriented strategies for the rural development of the financial system (Barslund & Tarp, 2008)
In recent years, Vietnam has been launching many programs to help the poor increase income by providing credit services for them There are two prime credit sectors coexist in finance market (Barslund & Tarp, 2008) comprising the formal sector which usually is government-subsidized and charges relatively low rates of interest (Hoff & Stiglitz, 1990): The Vietnam bank of Agriculture and Rural Development (VBARD), The Vietnam Bank for the Poor (VBP), The Vietnam Bank for Social Policy (VBSP), The People’s Credit Funds (PCFs), The Central Credit Fund (CCF) and other private and commercial bank involved in rural lending (Takashi, 2009); and the informal sector: Group Lending, Moneylenders, Rotating Savings and Credits Associations (ROSCAs), relatives and friends (Pham & Izumida, 2002) which plays an important role for farmers and generally out of their own equity (Hoff & Stiglitz, 1990) The purpose of borrowing from informal sources is not only for production but also for expenditure and other unexpected events Beside those credit sectors, the poor farmers still access to credit markets hardly due to lacking of collateral and assets Semi-formal credit sector appeared then as a powerful instrument aiming to alleviate poverty by lending a group of borrowers with low interest rates The Vietnamese Women’s Union (VWU) and the
Trang 12Vietnamese Farmers’ Association (VFA) are the two largest Vietnamese mass organizations in the semi-formal sector (APEC, 2011)
Although many financial sectors coexist in the Vietnamese rural credit market, households have a tendency to get loan from informal markets with the usury interest rate since almost each of household only has a small area for cultivation; furthermore, agriculture is usually affected by nature; due to high transaction costs and production risks, the banks and other credit organizations tend to avoid to give a loan to individual farmers (Takashi, 2009) For those problems, this paper attempts
to examine the determinants of household credit access to the informal sector by using the data of VHLSS 2008 and the Heckman two-stage model
1.2 Research objectives
The specified objectives of the study are to
(i) Identify the determinant factors that influence the credit access of households in the informal credit market in Vietnamese rural areas
(ii) Draw some policy implications in order to improve household’s access to the informal rural sources
1.3 Research questions
This study was intended to deal with the main research question is “What are the determinant factors that impact the amount of loan in the informal sources in Vietnamese rural areas?” In order to facilitate answering the main question, I divide
it into two sub-questions (i) Do productive assets of household head positively and significantly impact loan amount in the informal sector? and (ii) Does productive capital of household head negatively and significantly impact loan amount in the informal sector?
The scope of the study will be limited in using the data set of VHLSS 2008
to examine determinant factors of rural household access to credit markets in Vietnam
Trang 131.4 Justification of the thesis
This thesis attempts to fill the gap of lacking selection bias when using the VHLSS data set to estimate determinants of household credit access
This paper also tries to update new information and changes of influences on household access to credit in Vietnamese rural areas by using the data set of VHLSS 2008
The evidence from the paper is informative and useful for rural development authorities Therefore they are able to have a general vision on rural credit markets
in Vietnam and then propose some practical policy recommendations to develop Vietnamese rural credit markets, alleviate the rural poverty and also improve rural livings as well
1.5 Organization of the thesis
The rest of the paper is organized into four more chapters Chapter 2 presents history and origin of rural credit, theoretical review of rural financial market, and empirical studies which were carried out inside and outside of Vietnam Chapter 3 describes rural credit market in Vietnam, data, research methodology and analytical framework Chapter 4 analyses the empirical results, identifies determinants of household credit access and gives some quantitative analysis of those factors Chapter 5 concludes, suggests some practical policy implications; limitation and direction for further studies are also discussed in this chapter
Trang 14CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW
In this chapter, some theories and studies of informal rural credit access, particularly those with emphasis on small farmers, are reviewed The review covers some experiences of developing countries and relevance aspects to the Vietnam situation The chapter comprises a description of the history and origin of the rural credit system; types and sources of informal rural credit; imperfect credit market on credit access and indirect and direct screening Theoretical literature of monopoly and imperfect information paradigm are also reviewed for basically analyzing Empirical studies about determinant factors of household’s access to credit are also described
2.1 History and origin of the rural credit
According to Heidhues and Buchenrieder (1999), the concept of agricultural credit was known in the seventeenth century, when Chinese farmers use rural credit
in agricultural production to increase their cash income, and to improve their living standards Similarly, in Western countries, the Germany Landschaften was founded
by Frederick the Great in 1769 and its principles were used by the system for the Federal Farm loan of the United States The original credit concept stems from the need to break the vicious circle of poverty, as shown in the diagram below
Figure 2.1: The vicious circle of poverty (Heidhues & Buchenrieder, 1999)
Source: Heidhues & Buchenrieder (1999), Rural financial market development
Low Consumption Low Income
Low Investment
Low Savings Low Productivity
Trang 15The figure shows that poverty is affected by income, savings, investment, and productivity A low level in any of these factors will affect significantly poverty rate It is argued that the role of the credit program is to break this cycle, leading to
an increase in per capita income and thus increase the savings rate, investment rate and productivity (Heidhues & Buchenrieder, 1999)
2.2 Theoretical review of rural credit markets
Generally characteristics of the financial system in most LDCs is a state of
"financial dualism" consisting of organized and unorganized, they co-exist and operate parallel to each other The organized sector includes the commercial banks, the cooperative banks, credit societies, the rural banks, and government and semi-government agencies The unorganized sector mainly includes money lenders, indigenous bankers, rural development banks, pawnbrokers, landlords, merchants and traders Although specialization and division of labor have developed in the organized sector which is amendable to financial control, the unorganized sector is not (Ghatak, 1995)
The unorganized money markets in LDCs are quite complex and heterogeneous Figure 2.2 shows a typical picture of the unorganized money market
is shown There is a large number of non-professional groups of people joining in the rural sector to provide credit Two major source of credit are moneylenders & indigenous bankers; there is a variety of other sources which can be quite important
in some LDCs
Trang 16Figure 2.2: Unorganized financial markets in LDCs
Source: Ghatak (1995), Monetary economics in developing countries 2nd
In developing countries, it is suggested that there are four competing theories
of rural credit markets (Hoff & Stiglitz, 1990) including (i) monopoly power of village moneylenders, (ii) imperfect information, (iii) indirect screening mechanisms, and (iv) direct screening mechanisms
2.2.1 The theory of monopoly
In this view, the village moneylenders in the informal market is characterized
as a monopolist and usually charge with extortionate interest rate to maximize profits with assumption of no competition among moneylenders (Hoff & Stiglitz, 1990) When the lender receives information from various sources, there is asymmetric information between lenders It is expected that some lenders have the advantage of lending to certain people This gives strength to the loan market in a segment of the market, where he was better informed than any competing lender When a lender loans is the best information, or lenders to provide loans only in the region, the lender is also likely to have enforcement power Even in the absence of collateral and the threat of physical punishment, a lender can only make sure that
UNORGANISED SECTOR
Rural development banks
Regional rural banks Professional
relatives
Trang 17any borrower default on a loan is excluded from future credit A lender can use the lending strategy of pure monopoly to people when there is no problem of information and enforcement
The existence of monopoly profit or usurious interest rate can be illustrated with the help of a simple diagram (see figure 2.3)
Figure 2.3: Monopoly & competitive markets
Source: Ghatak (1995), Monetary economics in developing countries 2nd
Private moneylenders would persist to be a valued credit source in remote areas for a longer time due to their easier informality, approachability and flexibility Village lenders do not get involve much in the form of administration and information cost They are taking risks from lending to people who are not creditworthy, maintaining idle cash balances to provide for immediate credit needs These reasons could explain a part of high interest rates in the informal sector (George & James, 2010) The monopoly view cannot account for simultaneous existence of formal and informal sectors, despite the fact that interest rates of formal
Trang 18sources are essentially below those charged in the informal sources (Hoff & Stiglitz, 1990)
Adverse selection exists when borrowers differ from respect to the probability of repaying their loan In this case, the terms of a credit contract may affect the average quality of loan applicants For instance, low risk borrowers may drop out of the market if banks raise the rate of interest (Bester, 1987)
Next to adverse selection, moral hazard also has received a lot of debates on credit markets in many developing countries Moral hazard appears when an individual attempt taking actions to maximize her/his welfare by causing other's detriment in situations where problems of information asymmetry prevent assignments of personal damage caused by her/his action According to Bester (1987), moral hazard involves loan contracts which influence directly to the behavior of borrowers Therefore higher interest payments may induce the borrower
to seek investment projects with a higher profit also riskier
Informational asymmetry, high transaction costs and uncertainty are specific characteristics of informal credit markets These characteristics typically lead to problems of adverse selection and moral hazard In order to overcome those problems, indirect and direct screening mechanisms are applied in lending procedures to expose quality of borrowers
2.2.3 Indirect screening mechanism
According to Hoff & Stiglitz (1990), Interest rate is considerably as an indirect mechanism which replies on the design of contracts by lenders The lender obtains information about the riskiness of the borrower, and induces the borrower to
Trang 19take actions to reduce the probability of default and to repay the loan when he responds to these contracts in his own best interests A lender charges an interest rate which could influence directly on the riskiness of the loaning pool by either affecting borrower's actions (the incentive effect) or ranking potential borrowers (the effect of adverse selection) An interest rate, on account of either of these effects, is set too high This action inevitably leads to increase the riskiness of the applicant Therefore, an optimal interest rate maximizing the returns of lenders will
be set, which is a great deal of returns competition compared to the market-clearing rate In addition, also due to the influence of the interest rate on the nature of transactions, it is considered as an indirect screening mechanism, categorizing the riskiness of borrowers Those who are considered as worse risks are the ones willing to pay higher interest rates to get loan since they are fully aware of their low repayment probability (Stiglitz & Weiss, 1981)
There are two functions of interest rate, which serves as the function of a price and an indirect screening or incentive mechanism Whether there is competition or monopoly in the market, these indirect mechanisms are equally applicable
There are two other indirect mechanisms are characterized as incentive effects of terminations and market interlinkages to reduce the riskiness that borrowers undertake the actions desired by lenders First, the lender may use threat
of cutting off credit to stimulate desired borrower behavior; and the other is that lenders who are landlords or merchants may use the contractual terms in these other exchanges to affect the likelihood of default
2.2.4 Direct screening mechanism
In order to minimize cost of imperfect information, lenders can exploit particular direct screening mechanisms to monitor borrower’s behavior and enforce loan repayment in the credit market, withdrawing credit if the terms of the loan appear to be violated In developing countries, costs of direct screening, monitoring and enforcing loan repayment vary among lenders, which may lead to credit
Trang 20rationing in credit markets Village lenders could take advantage of being a product of living near the borrower or being part of the same kinship group or a party to some other transactions to reduce significantly the costs of screening, monitoring and enforcement (Hoff & Stiglitz, 1990)
by-Interlinked credit contracts are also another extensively used mechanism The borrower and lender jointly participate in a market which is not really a credit market This factor would reduce the cost of contract enforcement from the lender, and raise creditworthiness of borrowers to the lender Therefore, problems of enforcement, incentive and screening are alleviative since transactions of those markets can directly interlinked to loans In several markets, when an economic relationship requires transactions, a greater surplus can be gained from this scope Lenders/traders tend to utilize interlinked credit contracts by entailing their clients promise to sell all their farming goods from the harvest to them The form of interlinkage is widely used in Thailand, Pakistan, India and among other countries (Floro & Yotopoulos, 1991)
2.3 Empirical studies
+ International empirical studies
Okurut et al (2005) attempted to identify determinants which influence demand for informal credit by using the Heckman two-stage model Data were collected from 10692 households surveyed in the Uganda National Household Survey 1999/2000 He found that determinants which influence positively and significantly informal credit demand are age, dependency ratio, education level, household expenditure, gender and regional location On the other hand, factors consisting of age, asset values, regional location and gender are negatively and statistically impacted in term of the supply side
To get more understanding why farm households prefer getting a loan from informal markets even if the formal loan is more expensive, Guirkinger (2008) collected a panel data set and employed the logit model with fixed effects & random effects to examine why rural households tend to have more loans in informal
Trang 21sources in Piura, Peru Data was surveyed in two periods in the rural coastal area of Piura, Peru’s north coast First, there were 547 households surveyed in 1997 Second, 499 households were re-interviewed in 2003 He found that transaction costs in the formal sector are higher than in the informal sector It could lead to the informal effective cost of a loan cheaper; hence, it could be affordable for households access to informal loan in term of effective cost In addition, informal lenders have a more efficient mechanism in direct screening, monitoring and loan recovery techniques compared to formal lenders They can give loans to borrowers with more flexible & convenient conditions Thus risk adverse households tend to borrow from informal sources
An interesting paper of Akudugu et al (2009), he identified the characteristics that influence access to credit by women borrowers in Ghana Data of the research were obtained from the survey of 200 women farmers in the Upper East region of Ghana He found that rural formal credit has been in favor of women with the proportion of 44 percent compared to men is 56 percent Membership to economic associations, the type of crop grown (cash or food), the level of education, being a woman (gender) and income levels greatly influence women farmers’ access to credit
Another view of Mpuga (2010), he employed a panel data analysis of the Uganda household surveys conducted in 1992/1993 and 1999/2000 to study the accessibility to and the characteristics of demand for rural credit He found that the credit market is highly segmented in Uganda; determinants which strongly affect to demand for credit are the value of household assets owned, the level of education, age, location, occupation and other dwelling characteristics He also spotted that the educated and the young are eager to demand for credit while women are likely ashamed to apply for credit or less amount of credit compared to men Additionally the major credit supplies almost come from informal sources; and households which have collateral to secure loans usually tend towards to demand for credit higher
Trang 22In the study of Hussain and Khan (2011), they examined the determining factors which impact formal and informal credit demand by cotton growers in Bahawalpur They applied the ordinary least squares model and made use of a survey data set of
563 households in eleven villages of Hasilpur, Bahawalpur district, Pakistan
Some findings were that bigger farm size and higher educated households tend to demand credit from the formal financial institutions Meanwhile, the distance of formal sector, transaction cost, corruption and bribe tend to move the farmer from formal to informal sector
Similarly, Menkhoff and Rungruxsirivorn (2011) analyzed whether financial access is improved by Village funds They used the multinomial logit model and the household survey data set of 2200 households in three provinces in North-East Thailand to investigate There were three exciting findings in their study Firstly, the village funds reach the lower income groups better than formal sectors Secondly, the village funds give loans to typical borrowers of informal than formal sectors Finally, credit constraints are alleviated by the village funds
The participation in the credit market, which is affected by both demand and supply side factors, is a different concept from the credit access It was well described in an article of Shete and Garcia (2011) In order to identify the participation proportion of constrained and unconstrained farmers in the agricultural credit market, and to predict the factors which impact agricultural credit market participation, they took advantages of the bivariate probit model and a primary data set collected from the survey of 210 households in Finoteselam town, North Western Ethiopia Based on their study, there were a large proportion of smallholder farmers who were rationed out due to lacking of access Determinants pushing households participate in rural credit markets were household labor force, land size, high dependency ration, contingent expenses and participation in non-farm activities
Trang 23+ Vietnamese empirical studies
According to Pham and Izumida (2002), they used cross sectional household survey data and the Tobit model to examine the participation of Vietnamese rural household in the rural credit market, and the lending behavior of formal lender in response to the credit demand of households; they also employed the probit model
to investigate the impact of credit on household production Data were collected from the survey of 300 households and conducted in three representatively provinces of Vietnam: Ninh Binh (North), Quang Ngai (Center), and An Giang (South) The results showed that loans from the formal financial institutions are usually for production cultivation, livestock, etc In the other, consumption seems to
be the essential force behind the loans from informal sources Moreover, borrowing from informal sources could be partially for production; and borrowing from formal institutions is an additional Some findings were that accessibility to the formal financial institutions is decisively determined by total farming area and total value
of livestock; additionally it seems that the factors leading to the decision to borrow from informal sources are the dependency ratio of households and total farming area; total farming areas, deposit amount, liquidity position, and number of dependent are the determinant factors of household’s credit status; households, which have high dependence ratio, require more loans to finance their production as well as their consumption
In the other study, Barslund and Tarp (2008) carried out a survey of 932 rural households in four provinces of Vietnam comprising Long An, Quang Nam, Ha Tay and Phu Tho; and combined with information from the Vietnam Household Living Standard Survey 2002 By making use of the two-stage model and the Heckman model, they analyzed the determinants of credit demand and credit rationing for rural households respectively; and found that rural households either who are older
or better educated will access less to credit in the informal sector, whereas households which have a high dependency ratio and bad credit history access towards to more informal credit demand