Partial Credit Guarantees: Principles and Practice
Citation:
Patrick Honohan, Partial Credit Guarantees: Principles and Practice, Journal of Financial Stability, 6, 1, 2009, 1 - 9Download Item:

Abstract:
Partial credit guarantee schemes have experienced renewed interest
from governments keen to promote financial access for small
enterprises, not least as a response to the credit crunch in advanced
economies. While the market can find uses for partial credit
guarantees, the attractions for public policy can be illusory: indeed
their most attractive feature for myopic politicians may be the ease
with which the true cost of guarantees can be understated, at least at
the outset. In practice, the actual fiscal cost of existing schemes has
varied widely across countries and has represented a high per dollar
subsidy in some cases. Despite the recent application of some
innovative techniques, the social benefit of such schemes has proved
difficult to estimate, not least because their goals have been vague.
Operational design has influenced the cost and apparent effectiveness
of different schemes and has also varied widely. Clear and precise
goals, against which performance is regularly monitored, realistic
pricing verified by consistent and transparent accounting, and attention
to the incentive features of operational design, especially for the
intermediaries, are among the prerequisites for such schemes to have a
good chance of truly achieving improvements in social welfare.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/phonohanDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Honohan, Patrick
Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections:
Series/Report no:
Journal of Financial Stability6
1
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Full text availableKeywords:
EconomicsSubject (TCD):
International IntegrationDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jfs.2009.05.008Licences: