Your browser appears to be unsupported. Because of this, portions of the site may not function as intended.
Please install a current version of Chrome, Firefox, Edge, or Safari for a better experience.
1 World Bank, “Global Findex 2021”
We work to broaden the reach of low-cost digital financial services for the poor by supporting what we and our partners believe are the most catalytic approaches to financial inclusion. These include promoting the development of digital payment systems that can help spread use of digital financial services quickly, advancing gender equality to ensure that women share in the benefits of financial inclusion, and supporting the development of national and regional strategies that accelerate progress for the poor and can serve as models.
To achieve these objectives, we work with partners around the world to align on common principles for digital financial inclusion and support policymakers as they work to develop policies and regulations that facilitate growth in digital financial services and provide oversight and accountability. We also invest in national financial inclusion initiatives, through which the largest number of people living in poverty stand to benefit, including in Bangladesh, India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Indonesia, and East Africa.
We focus not on establishing a particular product or distribution channel, but rather on finding innovative ways to expand access and encourage markets to determine which products and channels are most effective. We support approaches that can provide financial services to the broadest number of people, but we also recognize that countries are at different stages of developing inclusive digital financial systems and their approaches must reflect the distinct needs of their economies and citizens.
One of our most important priorities is the development of digital payment systems that poor people and the businesses that serve them will actually use.
One of our most important priorities is the development of digital payment systems that poor people and the businesses that serve them will actually use.
These systems can foster competition, drive innovation, and accelerate the development of digital financial products and services customized for the needs of low-income communities. To be genuinely inclusive, these payment systems must have five key traits:
Perhaps the most important condition for the development of these payment systems is interoperability—allowing customers to transact with any other customer, whether or not they use the same service provider. This kind of open-loop system substantially lowers the costs and complexity of digital financial services and payment platforms. Opening up payment infrastructure to new kinds of companies outside of traditional banking organizations can help accelerate the development of these systems.
Our team is actively exploring ways to accelerate use of digital financial services.
Our team is actively exploring ways to accelerate use of digital financial services.
One priority is facilitating services that help consumers convert digital money to cash when needed. These “cash in, cash out” services must be easily accessible, trusted, and available at low cost for consumers in order to work well and enable use by more people. But they are the highest-cost component of a digital payment ecosystem and the biggest challenge for private-sector players that want to provide innovative payments solutions. We also are working to promote the development of effective identification systems in priority geographies. ID platforms such as the Aadhaar system in India are promising models for providing safe, efficient, and widely beneficial identification services that support financial inclusion across a country.
Governments can accelerate financial inclusion by establishing regulatory frameworks, policies, and incentives to help a wider variety of digital financial service providers compete on a level playing field while protecting consumers and the financial system.
Governments can accelerate financial inclusion by establishing regulatory frameworks, policies, and incentives to help a wider variety of digital financial service providers compete on a level playing field while protecting consumers and the financial system.
Open and fair competition will spur innovation and competition and drive down costs, as will essential regulations governing agents, licensing, and know-your-customer policies. But financial inclusion is not just about developing systems and lowering barriers. Our work also focuses on new risks and challenges, including how to protect millions of new consumers and how a wider range of market participants can be supervised.
At the core of our foundation’s approach to digital financial inclusion are investments that put women front and center to ensure that more of them benefit from empowering financial tools and services—such as digital financial accounts, mobile money, and credit.
At the core of our foundation’s approach to digital financial inclusion are investments that put women front and center to ensure that more of them benefit from empowering financial tools and services—such as digital financial accounts, mobile money, and credit.
When women can fully participate in the economy, they enhance the prosperity of their family, community, and country. Women’s economic empowerment is essential for global economic recovery and growth.
As of June 2021, we are committing US$500 million over the next five years to advance women’s financial inclusion. As part of this commitment, we are making strategic investments that align with the pillars set out by the Generation Equality Forum’s Economic Justice and Rights Action Coalition:
Every year, millions of people around the world transition out of poverty. Regional growth and economic opportunities like new jobs, technologies, and business opportunities help people build more stable economic lives. At the same time, millions of people remain trapped in a cycle of poverty that is difficult to escape. We believe that financial exclusion is a significant driver of this cycle.
About 1.4 billion people worldwide are excluded from formal financial services such as savings, payments, insurance, and credit. In developing economies, only 71 percent of adults have an account, and women—about 740 million of them—are disproportionately excluded from beneficial financial systems.
Most poor households still operate almost entirely through a cash economy. This means they have to save using physical assets, such as livestock or jewelry. Cash gets spent, animals die, and jewelry can be lost or stolen. What’s more, these forms of savings earn no interest and can actually lose value over time. To send money to family, those without a bank account have to rely on couriers or friends who carry cash by bus, which is expensive, insecure, and slow. To borrow money in an emergency, they must turn to moneylenders who charge notoriously high interest rates.
Without formal financial histories, people are also cut off from potentially stabilizing and uplifting opportunities like building credit or getting a loan to start a business. And it’s harder to weather common financial setbacks, such as serious illness, a poor harvest, or an economic downturn. All too often, financial exclusion makes the expenses of poverty difficult to overcome.
By submitting your email to subscribe, you agree to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Privacy & Cookies Notice
By submitting your email to subscribe, you agree to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Privacy & Cookies Notice
Inclusive Financial Systems – Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Leave a comment