Title
Financial Access and Labor Market Outcomes: Evidence from Credit Lotteries
Author(s)
Bernardus Van Doornik Bernardus Van Doornik (Banco Central do Brasil)
Armando Gomes Armando Gomes (Washington University in St. Louis)
David Schoenherr David Schoenherr (Princeton University)
Janis Skrastins Janis Skrastins (Washington University in St. Louis)
Abstract
We assess the employment and income effects of access to credit dedicated to investment in individual mobility (a motorcycle). For identification, we exploit random time-series variation in access to credit through random lotteries for participants in a group-lending mechanism in Brazil. We find that access to credit for investment in individual mobility permanently increases formal employment rates and salaries, yielding an annual real rate of return of 16.94 percent over a ten-year horizon. Consistent with a geographically broader job search, we find that individuals transition to jobs further away from home and public transportation. Our results suggest that credit constraints prevent individuals from accessing parts of the labor market. As a consequence, extending credit for investment in mobility enables individuals to access geographically distant labor market opportunities, yielding high and persistent returns.
Creation Date
2021-03
Section URL ID
Paper Number
2021-56
URL
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1IkFYdYavEB8LGgfzt5Gb6g1Xw0Gly6FG/view
File Function
Jel
D14, G23, J62, R20, R23
Keyword(s)
access to credit, household finance, labor mobility, spatial mismatch
Suppress
false
Series
13