Financial literacy in for-profit vs pro-social peer-to-peer lending

被引:5
|
作者
Gonzalez, Laura [1 ]
机构
[1] Calif State Univ Long Beach, Coll Business, Dept Finance, Long Beach, CA 90840 USA
关键词
Financial literacy; Peer to peer lending; Pro-social; Financial inclusion; G01; G20; G41; EDUCATION; NETWORKS; CREDIT; TRUST;
D O I
10.1108/MF-07-2021-0329
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
Purpose Peer-to-peer (P2P) lending facilitates direct online lending and aims to provide financial inclusion and investment returns. Lender goals range from for-profit to pro-social and objective information is limited, which highlights the need to examine heuristics. Design/methodology/approach This study examines 1,347 lending decisions by finance students on a mock P2P site. Testimonials were used to randomly condition the financially literate lenders towards for-profit or pro-social decision-making. Each investor evaluated three loans. The three loan applications were identical except for a female or male headshot (vs an icon) and random reports of 50% funding for the female or male loan in 3 days (vs 11 days for opposite gender and 7 for icon). Previous research surveys students on a mock platform (Gonzalez, 2020) and reports similar heuristics and lifelike decisions in student and general population samples (Gonzalez and Komarova, 2014). Findings Lenders randomly conditioned towards pro-social lending state lower trust in borrowers. However, pro-social investors state lower risk in P2P lending and higher financial literacy. Second, pro-social investors are more confident when lending to borrowers highly trusted by other lenders, especially if the popular loan applicant is female. Third, pro-social conditioning increases lending to male applicants when the popular loan applicant is female. Fourth, pro-social investors who have experienced financial trauma have greater confidence in bad loan recovery. Originality/value This is the first study of heuristics in pro-social vs for-profit P2P lending. In addition, it shows that testimonials can effectively condition lending goals and affect trust and risk perceptions.
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页码:315 / 337
页数:23
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