Publication | Closed Access
Credit Granting: A Comparative Analysis of Classification Procedures
150
Citations
18
References
1987
Year
Business AnalyticsCredit ScoreFinancial Distress ProblemManagementCredit ScoringClassification ProceduresAlternative DataQuantitative ManagementJudgemental ModelsSimultaneous Partitioning ProceduresFinancial ManagementAccountingCredit MarketCorporate GovernanceFinancial PerspectiveFinanceBusinessFinancial StructureCapital StructureBankruptcy
ABSTRACT Financial classification issues, and particularly the financial distress problem, continue to be subject to vigorous investigation. The corporate credit granting process has not received as much attention in the literature. This paper examines the relative effectiveness of parametric, nonparametric and judgemental classification procedures on a sample of corporate credit data. The judgemental model is based on the Analytic Hierarchy Process. Evidence indicates that (nonparametric) recursive partitioning methods provide greater information than simultaneous partitioning procedures. The judgemental model is found to perform as well as statistical models. A complementary relationship is proposed between the statistical and the judgemental models as an effective paradigm for granting credit.
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