Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey

Gender disparities in small and medium-size enterprise lending exist around the world and impede the growth of millions of women-led firms. This paper examines a potential driver of these disparities: gender-biased loan officers. Officer bias is me...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alibhai, Salman, Donald, Aletheia, Goldstein, Markus, Oguz, Alper Ahmet, Pankov, Alexander, Strobbe, Francesco
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/244611577766368167/Gender-Bias-in-SME-Lending-Experimental-Evidence-from-Turkey
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33120
id okr-10986-33120
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-331202022-09-20T00:12:51Z Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey Alibhai, Salman Donald, Aletheia Goldstein, Markus Oguz, Alper Ahmet Pankov, Alexander Strobbe, Francesco GENDER BIAS SME FINANCE FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS ACCESS TO FINANCE GENDER GAP CREDIT ENTREPRENEURSHIP BANKING SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES AFRICA GENDER POLICY GENDER INNOVATION LAB Gender disparities in small and medium-size enterprise lending exist around the world and impede the growth of millions of women-led firms. This paper examines a potential driver of these disparities: gender-biased loan officers. Officer bias is measured through a novel loan application experiment conducted with 77 loan officers in Turkish banks. The analysis finds that 35 percent of the loan officers are biased against female applicants, with women receiving loan amounts $14,000 lower on average compared with men. Experience in the banking sector can attenuate this bias, with each year of experience reducing gender biased loan allocations by 6 percent. The results suggest that loan officers may use gender bias as a heuristic device given limited information and risk aversion. Helping newly recruited and lesser experienced loan officers to better discern loan application quality may thus improve financing of business loans to women and reduce gender gaps in entrepreneurship. 2020-01-02T21:52:55Z 2020-01-02T21:52:55Z 2019-12 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/244611577766368167/Gender-Bias-in-SME-Lending-Experimental-Evidence-from-Turkey http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33120 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9100 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Europe and Central Asia Turkey
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic GENDER BIAS
SME FINANCE
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
ACCESS TO FINANCE
GENDER GAP
CREDIT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
BANKING
SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
spellingShingle GENDER BIAS
SME FINANCE
FEMALE ENTREPRENEURS
ACCESS TO FINANCE
GENDER GAP
CREDIT
ENTREPRENEURSHIP
BANKING
SMALL AND MEDIUM ENTERPRISES
AFRICA GENDER POLICY
GENDER INNOVATION LAB
Alibhai, Salman
Donald, Aletheia
Goldstein, Markus
Oguz, Alper Ahmet
Pankov, Alexander
Strobbe, Francesco
Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Turkey
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 9100
description Gender disparities in small and medium-size enterprise lending exist around the world and impede the growth of millions of women-led firms. This paper examines a potential driver of these disparities: gender-biased loan officers. Officer bias is measured through a novel loan application experiment conducted with 77 loan officers in Turkish banks. The analysis finds that 35 percent of the loan officers are biased against female applicants, with women receiving loan amounts $14,000 lower on average compared with men. Experience in the banking sector can attenuate this bias, with each year of experience reducing gender biased loan allocations by 6 percent. The results suggest that loan officers may use gender bias as a heuristic device given limited information and risk aversion. Helping newly recruited and lesser experienced loan officers to better discern loan application quality may thus improve financing of business loans to women and reduce gender gaps in entrepreneurship.
format Working Paper
author Alibhai, Salman
Donald, Aletheia
Goldstein, Markus
Oguz, Alper Ahmet
Pankov, Alexander
Strobbe, Francesco
author_facet Alibhai, Salman
Donald, Aletheia
Goldstein, Markus
Oguz, Alper Ahmet
Pankov, Alexander
Strobbe, Francesco
author_sort Alibhai, Salman
title Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey
title_short Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey
title_full Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey
title_fullStr Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey
title_full_unstemmed Gender Bias in SME Lending : Experimental Evidence from Turkey
title_sort gender bias in sme lending : experimental evidence from turkey
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2020
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/244611577766368167/Gender-Bias-in-SME-Lending-Experimental-Evidence-from-Turkey
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33120
_version_ 1764478043246559232