Alan Finkelstein Shapiro, Federico S. Mandelman, and Victoria Nuguer
Working Paper 2022-2
January 2022

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Abstract: We build a model with a traditional banking system, endogenous entry of firms and fintech intermediaries, and firm heterogeneity in credit access and usage to study the credit-market, macroeconomic, and business cycle implications of the recent sizable growth in the number of fintech intermediaries in emerging economies. Our analysis delivers three findings. First, the impact of greater fintech entry on firm financial inclusion depends on whether greater entry is driven by lower entry costs for fintech intermediaries or lower barriers to fintech credit for unbanked firms. Second, greater fintech entry can have positive long-term macroeconomic effects. Third, greater fintech entry leads to a reduction in output volatility but results in greater relative volatility in bank credit and consumption. The effects of fintech entry on macro outcomes and volatility hinge critically on the interaction between domestic financial shocks and the reduction in fintech lending rates stemming from greater fintech entry. Unless greater fintech entry leads to lower fintech credit costs for firms, greater fintech entry will have no meaningful credit-market or business-cycle consequences.

JEL classification: E24, E32, E44, F41, G21

Key words: financial access and participation, endogenous firm entry, banking sector, fintech entry, emerging economy business cycles

https://doi.org/10.29338/wp2022-02


The authors thank participants in the BCU-RIDGE 2021 Financial Stability Workshop for useful comments and feedback. The views expressed here are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta or the Federal Reserve System. Any remaining errors are the authors' responsibility.

Please address questions regarding content to Alan Finkelstein Shapiro, Department of Economics, Tufts University, Joyce Cummings Center, 177 College Avenue, Medford, MA 02155; Federico Mandelman, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 1000 Peachtree Street NE, Atlanta, GA, 30309; or Victoria Nuguer, Inter-American Development Bank, 1300 New York Avenue, Washington, DC, 20577.

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