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Pennsylvania Convention Center, 106-B
Hosted By:
Econometric Society
and growth and entrepreneur characteristics. We also randomly distributed cash grants of about $100 to measure their marginal return to capital. We find that the information provided by community members is predictive of many key business and household characteristics including marginal return to capital. While on average the marginal
return to capital is modest, preliminary estimates suggest that entrepreneurs given a community rank one standard deviation above the mean enjoy an 8.8% monthly marginal return to capital and those ranked two standard deviations above the mean enjoy a 13.9% monthly return. When respondents are told their reports influence the distribution of grants, we find a considerable degree of misreporting in favor of family members and close friends, which substantially diminishes the value of reports.
Mechanism Design Meets Development
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 7, 2018 10:15 AM - 12:15 PM
- Chair: Pascaline Dupas, Stanford University
Targeting Experimentation Subsidies: A Mechanism Design Approach
Abstract
TBATargeting High Ability Entrepreneurs Using Community Information: Mechanism Design In The Field
Abstract
The impacts of cash grants and access to credit are known to vary widely, but progress on targeting these services to high-ability, reliable entrepreneurs is so far limited. This paper reports on a field experiment in Maharashtra, India that assesses (1) whether community members have information about one another that can be used to identify high-ability microentrepreneurs, (2) whether organic incentives for community members to misreport their information obscure its value, and (3) whether simple techniques from mechanism design can be used to realign incentives for truthful reporting. We asked 1,380 respondents to rank their entrepreneur peers on various metrics of business profitabilityand growth and entrepreneur characteristics. We also randomly distributed cash grants of about $100 to measure their marginal return to capital. We find that the information provided by community members is predictive of many key business and household characteristics including marginal return to capital. While on average the marginal
return to capital is modest, preliminary estimates suggest that entrepreneurs given a community rank one standard deviation above the mean enjoy an 8.8% monthly marginal return to capital and those ranked two standard deviations above the mean enjoy a 13.9% monthly return. When respondents are told their reports influence the distribution of grants, we find a considerable degree of misreporting in favor of family members and close friends, which substantially diminishes the value of reports.
Discussant(s)
Pascaline Dupas
,
Stanford University
Lori Beaman
,
Northwestern University
David McKenzie
,
World Bank
JEL Classifications
- A1 - General Economics