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Credit Rationing and Institutional Constraint

Evidence from Rural China

by Xianping Jia (Author)
©2008 Thesis XVI, 152 Pages

Summary

The availability of credit has long occupied a central place in development strategies. Rural credit institutions are more than an instrument of intermediation, they also handle risk, mobilize and disseminate information about market and technology. Given the informational problems and innate disadvantages of rural credit markets, the rationale for laissez-faire and liberalization is by no means based on a sound understanding of the state’s role in redressing market failures. This study examines the rural credit market in China, its impacts on agricultural transformation and the state’s role in the functioning of markets. The particular objectives are to identify the determinants of credit rationing in both formal and informal sectors, to show the extent of credit rationing, to reveal the dynamic role of institutional lending in agricultural transformation, and to understand the challenges in developing efficient institutions.

Details

Pages
XVI, 152
Year
2008
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631582855
Language
English
Keywords
Agricultural Transition China Ländlicher Raum Agrarkredit Kreditrestriktion China´s Rural Finanacial Market Credit Rationing
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2008. XVI, 152 pp., num. tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Xianping Jia (Author)

The Author: Xiangping Jia worked as a doctoral researcher at the Department for Rural Development Theory and Policy at the University of Hohenheim (Germany) from 2004 to 2008. In 2008 he received a Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics from this university. He conducted research in the fields of rural credit access, land property rights and tenure security, agricultural technology and rural institutions.

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Title: Credit Rationing and Institutional Constraint