General Principles for Credit Reporting
Financial infrastructure broadly defined comprises the underlying foundation for a country's financial system. It includes all institutions, information, technologies, rules and standards that enable financial intermediation. Poor financial in...
Main Author: | |
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Format: | Debt and Creditworthiness Study |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2011/09/16426885/general-principles-credit-reporting http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12792 |
Summary: | Financial infrastructure broadly defined
comprises the underlying foundation for a country's
financial system. It includes all institutions, information,
technologies, rules and standards that enable financial
intermediation. Poor financial infrastructure in many
developing countries poses a considerable constraint upon
financial institutions to expand their offering of financial
services to underserved segments of the population and the
economy. It also creates risks which can threaten the
stability of the financial system as a whole. This report
describes the nature of credit reporting elements which are
crucial for understanding credit reporting and to ensuring
that credit reporting systems are safe, efficient and
reliable. It intends to provide an international agreed
framework in the form of international standards for credit
reporting systems' policy and oversight. The Principles
for credit reporting are deliberately expressed in a general
way to ensure that they can be useful in all countries and
that they will be durable. These principles are not intended
for use as a blueprint for the design or operation of any
specific system, but rather suggest the key characteristics
that should be satisfied by different systems and the
infrastructure used to support them to achieve a stated
common purpose, namely expanded access and coverage, fair
conditions, and safe and efficient service for borrowers and
lenders. Section two provides a brief overview of the market
for credit information sharing and credit reporting
activities and then analyzes in some detail the key
considerations underlying credit reporting. Section three
outlines the general principles and related roles. Section
four proposes a framework for the effective oversight of
credit reporting systems. |
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