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An Examination of Borrower Orientation and Scale Effects in UK Credit Unions
Author(s) -
McKillop Donal,
Ferguson Charles
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
annals of public and cooperative economics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.526
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 1467-8292
pISSN - 1370-4788
DOI - 10.1111/1467-8292.00080
Subject(s) - loan , dividend , credit reference , asset (computer security) , economics , business , credit history , credit union , credit crunch , financial services , finance , monetary economics , financial system , credit risk , computer security , computer science
At present there are 597 credit unions operating within the UK with their growth, be it defined in term of new credit union establishment, asset growth or membership growth, placing them as the fasting growing financial grouping in the UK over this last decade. The fundamental motivation of a credit union is to provide financial services to its membership, in particular a depository for savings and an access to consumer credit. As a practical problem there are, however, a number of reasons why credit unions may achieve a less than perfect balance in the treatment of borrowers and savers. For example, maintaining low loan rates may reduce the credit union’s ability to offer high dividend rates while the maintenance of high dividend rates may require higher loan rates. Consequently, the competing pull of these two objectives may result in the emergence of conflict between those credit union members who on the one hand are net savers and those that are net borrowers. If such conflict does emerge it is then likely to place in jeopardy other aspects of a credit union’s function most notably their role as financial counsellors and promoters of thrift within low income communities. The approach taken in this study is to derive an index of member group imbalance and then to employ this index to determine whether member group imbalance has an adverse impact upon the generation of total benefits by individual credit unions. The analysis demonstrates that there is a strong pro‐borrower bias in the operation of UK credit unions with this pro‐borrower bias driven by the regulatory environment within which they operate.