An empirical study on credit card loan delinquency

Hyeongjun Kim, Hoon Cho, Doojin Ryu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Scopus citations

Abstract

Following the Basel II convention, consumer credit default is commonly defined as delinquency beyond a period of 90 days. In this study, rather than considering default as a binary variable, we dissect delinquency states further to investigate default behavior in greater detail. As such, we define three states—no delinquency, delinquency and serious delinquency—and estimate the probabilities of the transitions between states using extensive panel data from Korea, covering a wide range of behavioral information. Our findings have several economic implications. First, the factors that affect delinquency risk can differ from those that affect the transition from delinquency to serious delinquency. Second, the recent increase in the number of seriously delinquent accounts can be attributed to changes in the borrower age distribution. Third, macroeconomic conditions, especially differences in gross domestic product and consumption growth, have led to the recent increase in delinquent accounts. Fourth, the debt-to-income (DTI) ratio has a profound effect on transitions between delinquency states and thus affects both recovery and delinquency. Furthermore, this result is robust to controls for demographic and macroeconomic factors.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)437-449
Number of pages13
JournalEconomic Systems
Volume42
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2018

Keywords

  • Account-level dataset
  • Credit card loan
  • Delinquency risk
  • Emerging market
  • Multinomial logit

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