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dc.contributor.authorSriram M.S.
dc.date.accessioned2022-02-11T10:14:37Z
dc.date.available2022-02-11T10:14:37Z
dc.date.issued2005
dc.identifier.citationSriram, M. S. (2005). Information asymmetry and trust: A framework for studying microfinance in India. Vikalpa, 30(4). https://doi.org/10.1177/0256090920050407
dc.identifier.issn2560909
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.doi.org/10.1177/0256090920050407
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11718/25281
dc.description.abstractIn recent times, microfinance has emerged as a major innovation in the rural financial marketplace. Microfinance largely addresses the issue of access to financial services. In trying to understand the innovation of microfinance and how it has proved to be effective, the author looks at certain design features of microfinance. He first starts by identifying the need for financial service institutions which is basically to bridge the gap between the need for financial services across time, geographies, and risk profiles. In providing services that bridge this gap, formal institutions have limited access to authentic information both in terms of transaction history and expected behaviour and, therefore, resort to seeking excessive information thereby adding to the transaction costs. The innovation in microfinance has been largely to bridge this gap through a series of trustbased surrogates that take the transaction-related risks to the people who have the information � the community through measures of social collateral. In this paper, the author attempts to examine the trajectory of institutional intermediation in the rural areas, particularly with the poor and how it has evolved over a period of time. It identifies a systematic breach of trust as one of the major problems with the institutional interventions in the area of providing financial services to the poor and argues that microfinance uses trust as an effective mechanism to address one of the issues of imperfect information in financial transactions. The paper also distinguishes between the different models of microfinance and identifies which of these models use trust in a positivist frame and as a coercive mechanism. The specific objectives of the paper are to: Superimpose the role of trust in various types of exchanges and see how it impacts the effectiveness of repeated transactions. While greater access to information fosters trust and thus helps social networks to reduce transaction costs, there could be limits to which exchanges could solely depend on networks and trust. Look at the frontiers where mutual trust cannot work as a surrogate for lower appraisal costs. Use an example in the Canadian context and see how an entity that started on the basis of social networks and trust had to morph into using the techniques used by other formal nonneighbourhood institutions as it grew in size and went beyond a threshold. Using the Canadian example, the author argues that as the transactions get sophisticated, it is possible to achieve what informal networks have achieved through the creative use of information technology. While we find that the role of trust both in the positivist and the coercive frame does provide some interesting insights into how exchanges with the poor could be managed, there still could be breaches in the assumptions. This paper identifies the conditions under which the breaches could possibly happen and also speculates on the effect of such breaches. � 2005, SAGE Publications Ltd. All rights reserved.
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherSAGE Publications Ltd
dc.relation.ispartofVikalpa
dc.subjectFinancial Services
dc.subjectIntermediation
dc.subjectMicrofinance
dc.subjectTransaction Costs
dc.subjectTrust
dc.titleInformation asymmetry and trust: A framework for studying microfinance in India
dc.typeArticle
dc.rights.licenseCC BY-NC, CC BY
dc.contributor.affiliationCentre for Management in Agriculture at Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, India
dc.contributor.institutionauthorSriram, M.S., Centre for Management in Agriculture at Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad, India
dc.description.scopusid36159016300
dc.identifier.doi10.1177/0256090920050407
dc.identifier.endpage85
dc.identifier.startpage77
dc.identifier.issue4
dc.identifier.volume30


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    The open-access journal articles collection includes articles published by faculty/researcher of Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad in Gold/Diamond/ Hybrid/Green Open Access Journal. The Gold/Diamond Open Access Journals are those which published research articles as open access and are primarily licensed under the creative commons.

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