2015
DOI: 10.1108/afr-01-2015-0005
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Modeling the impact of distance between offices and borrowers on agricultural loan volume

Abstract: Purpose – Farm Credit is a major provider of credit to agricultural producers in Oklahoma and nationally. The decision to place a new Farm Credit office reduces borrower search and travel costs and should increase loan volume. The purpose of this paper is to model the new loan volume as function of distance from east central Oklahoma county centroids to Farm Credit offices. The model is then used to predict the impact of placing new offices in underserved areas. Design/methodology/approach – County aggreg… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…In addition, Verteramo-Chiu et al (2014) investigate risk rationing and the demand for agricultural credit by comparing Mexican and Chinese farmers. Witte et al (2015) deliver first insights of loan demand on the basis of actual data. They analyze the impact of the distance between bank offices and borrowers on aggregated agricultural loan volume in Oklahoma and find a significant correlation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, Verteramo-Chiu et al (2014) investigate risk rationing and the demand for agricultural credit by comparing Mexican and Chinese farmers. Witte et al (2015) deliver first insights of loan demand on the basis of actual data. They analyze the impact of the distance between bank offices and borrowers on aggregated agricultural loan volume in Oklahoma and find a significant correlation.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The closer farming to the market, the more likely farmers to access credit. Witte et al (2015) show that distances from location to both branch and field offices significantly reduce new loan volume. This indicates that credit providers were still distant from the location of the farm.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…As a result, females may have a better access to formal credit than their male counterparts (Fletschner, 2009). Asymmetric information prevails in rural credit markets since it is difficult for credit institutions to fetch right information about farmers due to geographical distance (Cerqueiro et al, 2011;Bellucci et al, 2013;Witte et al, 2015;Kislat et al, 2017). Because rice farmers disperse over a vast rural area, geographical distance and the resulted degree of asymmetric information between a credit insitution and a farmer are substantial.…”
Section: Impact Of Credit Rationing On the Amount Of Capital Allocated To Inputsmentioning
confidence: 99%