论文标题
性别动物仍然可以在有利的不同影响下存在:在线P2P贷款的警示故事
Gender Animus Can Still Exist Under Favorable Disparate Impact: a Cautionary Tale from Online P2P Lending
论文作者
论文摘要
本文在中国著名的在线点对点(P2P)贷款平台上调查了性别歧视及其基本驱动因素。尽管对P2P贷款的现有研究专注于不同的治疗(DT),但DT狭义地认识到直接的歧视和忽视间接和替代歧视,从而提供了不完整的情况。在这项工作中,我们测量了一个称为不同影响(DI)的扩展歧视概念,该概念涵盖了贷款融资率的任何差异,这些差异与实际回报率不相称。我们开发了一种两阶段的预测替代方法,以从观察数据中估算DI。我们的发现揭示了(i)女性借款人,鉴于实际的实际收益率相同,获得资金的可能性增加了3.97%,(ii)至少有37.1%的偏爱女性是间接或代理歧视,并且(iii)DT确实低估了总体女性偏爱的总数为44.6%。但是,我们还可以通过一个特定的歧视驱动因素(理性统计歧视,在其中,投资者可以准确地预测不完善的观察结果预期回报率。此外,女性借款人仍需要提高预期回报率2%才能获得资金,这表明另一个基于驾驶员的歧视歧视并存,并且反对女性。这些结果完全讲述了一个警示性的故事:一方面,P2P贷款提供了一个有价值的替代信贷市场,支持女性的平权行动自然而然地从理性人群中出现;另一方面,虽然总体歧视效应(在DI或DT方面)有利于女性,但与基于味觉的歧视有关,可以持续存在,并且可以被其他共存的歧视驱动因素(例如统计歧视)所掩盖。
This paper investigates gender discrimination and its underlying drivers on a prominent Chinese online peer-to-peer (P2P) lending platform. While existing studies on P2P lending focus on disparate treatment (DT), DT narrowly recognizes direct discrimination and overlooks indirect and proxy discrimination, providing an incomplete picture. In this work, we measure a broadened discrimination notion called disparate impact (DI), which encompasses any disparity in the loan's funding rate that does not commensurate with the actual return rate. We develop a two-stage predictor substitution approach to estimate DI from observational data. Our findings reveal (i) female borrowers, given identical actual return rates, are 3.97% more likely to receive funding, (ii) at least 37.1% of this DI favoring female is indirect or proxy discrimination, and (iii) DT indeed underestimates the overall female favoritism by 44.6%. However, we also identify the overall female favoritism can be explained by one specific discrimination driver, rational statistical discrimination, wherein investors accurately predict the expected return rate from imperfect observations. Furthermore, female borrowers still require 2% higher expected return rate to secure funding, indicating another driver taste-based discrimination co-exists and is against female. These results altogether tell a cautionary tale: on one hand, P2P lending provides a valuable alternative credit market where the affirmative action to support female naturally emerges from the rational crowd; on the other hand, while the overall discrimination effect (both in terms of DI or DT) favors female, concerning taste-based discrimination can persist and can be obscured by other co-existing discrimination drivers, such as statistical discrimination.