
-Little collateral means that they can only get small loans.
-Moneylenders make these small loans at very high interest rates.
-Very high interest rates mean that borrowers won't make much profit.
-After the loan is repaid, borrowers do not have much more collateral than they did before (because they did not make much profit).
...and the cycle continues!
-Little collateral means that they can only get small loans.
-Moneylenders make these small loans at very high interest rates.
-Very high interest rates mean that borrowers won't make much profit.
-After the loan is repaid, borrowers do not have much more collateral than they did before (because they did not make much profit).
Now, what piece of that cycle can change?
--can the moneylender lend a larger sum?
--can the moneylender lend at a lower rate?
--can the borrower take a smaller loan?
--can the borrowers do something more profitable with the loan?
The answer to all of these is 'YES'...at least in theory. But, the moneylender lends based on the condition that he gets paid back more. And, since he is a monopolist, he sets the terms.
The moneylender will look at the borrower and decide how much to lend based upon the borrower's resources and what the borrower plans to do with the loan. Since he is a monopolist, he can really decide how large a loan the borrower will take and how high the interest will be on it. He estimates how much the borrower will make and sets the interest so high that the borrower will make just enough to live off of and will be forced to return to the monopolist for another loan next time.
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