The effect of organizational hierarchy on loan rates and risk assessments
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| Publication date | 2012 |
| Number of pages | 41 |
| Publisher | Tilburg / Amsterdam: Tilburg University / University of Amsterdam |
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| Abstract |
We examine whether loan decisions are affected by the internal decision structure of the bank. Banks typically grant decision rights on straight-forward loans entirely to individual loan officers. For more risky loans these officers have to seek ratification for their loan proposals at higher hierarchical levels within banks (e.g., a credit committee). As banks typically provide loan officers with incentives to make loans, loan officers can increase the likelihood of loan approval by communicating the risk-return characteristics of the loan request favorably. Using internal records from a bank, our sample consists of approved loan requests coming from small firms. Our evidence suggests that loan contracts approved at higher hierarchical levels vis-à-vis those approved by loan officers feature lower loan rates and a greater likelihood of an adverse risk re-classification one year after the loan approval.
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| Document type | Working paper |
| Note | January, 2012 |
| Language | English |
| Published at | http://www3.nd.edu/~carecob/Workshops/11-12Workshops/BouwensPaper012512.pdf |
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