Dublin Core
Title
Gender discrimination in commercial banks’ credit markets in ghana: a decomposition and counterfactual analysis
Creator
Frank Gyimah Sackey, Peter Nkrumah Amponsah
Description
Access to formal credit in Ghana has been a major challenge to empowering women and promoting women enterprises even in this era of financial sector liberalization. Gender bias in both the formal and informal financial sectors have created huge credit gaps between men and women entrepreneurs. This study examines factors that influence credit rationing and discrimination against women in the credit markets of commercial banks in Ghana. Data for the study, comprising borrowers’ information as provided in loan application forms, were gathered from the commercial banks’ credit application database. Using the 2-stage least squares instrumental variable regression, we found that individual, firm, and loan characteristics were significant in determining credit rationing. The Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition and counterfactual analysis pointed to a credit gap between men and women …
Publisher
Adonis & Abbey Publishers
Date
2018
Source
https://scholar.google.com/citations?view_op=view_citation&hl=en&user=dzxWX-AAAAAJ&citation_for_view=dzxWX-AAAAAJ:qjMakFHDy7sC
Language
English