Saving More to Borrow Less: Experimental Evidence from Access to Formal Savings Accounts in Chile

Saving More to Borrow Less: Experimental Evidence from Access to Formal Savings Accounts in Chile

7 July, 2020    

Poverty is often characterized not only by low and unstable income, but also by heavy debt burdens. We find that reducing barriers to saving through access to free savings accounts decreases participants’ short-term debt by about 20%. In addition, participants who experience an economic shock have less need to reduce consumption, and subjective well-being improves significantly. Precautionary savings and credit therefore act as substitutes in providing self-insurance, and participants prefer borrowing less when a free formal savings account is available. Take-up patterns suggest that requests by others for participants to share their resources may be a key obstacle to saving.

Similar Articles
Framing Goals to Influence Personal Savings: The Role of Specificity and Construal Level
In four studies, we show that consumers’ savings can be increased or decreased merely by changing the way consumers think about their saving goal...
Are financial retirement incentives more effective if pension knowledge is high?
We study the combined effects of financial incentives and information provision on retirement behavior. To elicit preferences for retirement timing...
Identification Strategy: A Field Experiment on Borrower Responses to Fingerprinting for Loan Enforcement
How do borrowers respond to improvements a lender’s ability to punish defaulters? We implemented a randomized field experiment in Malawi examinin...