nep-fle New Economics Papers
on Financial Literacy and Education
Issue of 2021‒03‒29
six papers chosen by



  1. Financial inclusion and its heterogeneous effect on household income By Rodríguez, D.; Gallego, J; Jaramillo, F.
  2. Narrowing the Gender Gap in Mobile Banking By Jean N. Lee; Jonathan Morduch; Saravana Ravindran; Abu S. Shonchoy
  3. Closing the gender profit gap By Catia Batista; Sandra Sequeira; Pedro C. Vicente
  4. Who is a passive saver under opt-in and auto-enrollment? By Goda, Gopi Shah; Levy, Matthew R.; Manchester, Colleen Flaherty; Sojourner, Aaron; Tasoff, Joshua
  5. India’s Approach to Open Banking: Some Implications for Financial Inclusion By Yan Carriere-Swallow; Vikram Haksar; Manasa Patnam
  6. Law, mobile money drivers and mobile money innovations in developing countries By Simplice A. Asongu; Peter Agyemang-Mintah; Rexon T. Nting

  1. By: Rodríguez, D.; Gallego, J; Jaramillo, F.
    Abstract: This paper examines how, in the main Colombian cities, the effect of financial inclusion (FI) on income changes along the distribution of household income considering labor informality. We construct a multidimensional FI indicator based on the World Bank definition and on the data. Using a quantile regression technique, we estimate the effect of FI on income at each quantile for informal and formal households. The findings indicate that FI has a positive impact throughout the income distribution but is greater in low-income and informal households. The results suggest that FI can have potential effects in alleviating poverty and closing the income gap.
    Keywords: Financial inclusion; household income; labor informality
    JEL: D30
    Date: 2020–11–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:col:000561:019121&r=all
  2. By: Jean N. Lee (World Bank); Jonathan Morduch (Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, New York University); Saravana Ravindran (Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore); Abu S. Shonchoy (Department of Economics, Florida International University)
    Abstract: Mobile banking and related digital financial technologies can make financial services cheaper and more widely accessible in low-income economies, but gender gaps persist. We present evidence from two connected field experiments in Bangladesh designed to encourage the adoption and use of mobile banking by poor, illiterate households. We show that training can dramatically increase adoption and usage by women. At the same time, women on average persist in using mobile banking at a lower rate than men. The study focuses on migrants and their families in Bangladesh. Despite large differences between female and male migrants in income and education, the first experiment shows that a training program led to a similarly large, positive impact on mobile banking usage by female and male migrants, increasing usage rates for both by about 45 percentage points. That led to increases in remittances sent to rural areas, reduced rural poverty, and increased rural consumption. Both female and male migrants in the treatment group, however, reported worse physical and emotional health, adding to health challenges reported by women across treatment and control groups. A second experiment explores whether the way that the technology was introduced and explained made an additional difference in narrowing gender gaps. Despite the lack of statistical power to detect small treatment impacts, we find suggestive evidence that the treatment increased mobile banking adoption by female migrants.
    Keywords: gender, financial inclusion, digital money, migration, field experiment, Bangladesh
    JEL: R23 O33 O16
    Date: 2021–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:fiu:wpaper:2108&r=all
  3. By: Catia Batista; Sandra Sequeira; Pedro C. Vicente
    Abstract: We examine the complementarity between access to mobile savings accounts and improved financial management skills on the performance of female-led micro-enterprises in Mozambique. This combined support is associated with a large increase in both short and long-term firm profits and in financial security, when compared to the independent effect of each of these interventions. This support allowed female-headed micro-enterprises to close the gender gap in performance and financial literacy relative to their male counterparts. The main drivers of improved business performance are increased financial management practices (bookkeeping), an increase in accessible savings and reduced transfers to friends and relatives.
    Keywords: Microenterprise development, management, gender, mobile money, financial literacy, economic development
    Date: 2021
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:unl:novafr:wp2104-1&r=all
  4. By: Goda, Gopi Shah; Levy, Matthew R.; Manchester, Colleen Flaherty; Sojourner, Aaron; Tasoff, Joshua
    Abstract: Defaults have been shown to have a powerful effect on retirement saving behavior yet there is limited research on who is most affected by defaults and whether this varies based on features of the choice environment. Using administrative data on employer-sponsored retirement accounts linked to survey data, we estimate the relationship between retirement saving choices and individual characteristics – long-term discounting, present bias, financial literacy, and exponential-growth bias – under two distinct choice environments: an opt-in regime and an auto-enrollment regime. Consistent with our conceptual model, we find that the determinants of following the default and contribution behavior are regime-specific. Under the opt-in regime, financial literacy plays an important role in predicting total contributions, active saving choices, and maxing out contributions in the tax-preferred account. In contrast, under the auto-enrollment regime, present bias is the most significant behavioral predictor of contribution behavior. A causal interpretation of the estimates suggests that auto-enrollment increases saving primarily among those with low financial literacy.
    Keywords: present bias; exponential-growth bias; ousehold finance; retirement saving decisions; choice architecture; defaults; financial literacy; procrastination
    JEL: J1
    Date: 2020–05–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ehl:lserod:102088&r=all
  5. By: Yan Carriere-Swallow; Vikram Haksar; Manasa Patnam
    Abstract: We examine how the development of the digital infrastructure known as the “India Stack”—including an interoperable payments system, a universal digital ID, and other features—is delivering on the government’s objective to expand the provision of financial services. While each individual component of the India Stack is important, we argue that its key overarching feature is a foundational approach of providing extensive public infrastructures and standards that generates important synergies across the layers of the Stack. Until recently, a large share of India’s population lacked access to formal banking services and was largely reliant on cash for financial transactions. The expansion of mobile-based financial services that enable simple and convenient ways to save and conduct financial transactions has provided a novel alternative for expanding the financial net. The Stack’s improved digital infrastructures have already allowed for a rapid increase in the use of digital payments and the entry of a range of competitors including fintech and bigtech firms.
    Date: 2021–02–26
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:imf:imfwpa:2021/052&r=all
  6. By: Simplice A. Asongu (Yaounde, Cameroon); Peter Agyemang-Mintah (Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirate); Rexon T. Nting (London, UK)
    Abstract: This study investigates how the rule of law (i.e. law) modulates demand- and supply-side drivers of mobile money to influence mobile money innovations (i.e. mobile money accounts, the mobile phone used to send money and the mobile phone used to receive money) in developing countries. The following findings from Tobit regressions are established. First, from the demand-side linkages, law modulates: (i) bank accounts and automated teller machine (ATM) penetration for negative interactive relationships with mobile money innovations and (ii) bank sector concentration for a positive interactive relationship with mobile money accounts. Second, from supply-side linkages, law interacts with: (i) mobile subscriptions for a negative relationship with the mobile phone used to send money; (ii) mobile connectivity coverage for a negative nexus on the mobile phone used to receive money and (iii) mobile connectivity performance for a negative influence on the mobile phone used to send/receive money. Policy implications are discussed in the light of enhancing the rule of law as well as improving mobile phone subscription, connectivity and performance dynamics.
    Keywords: Mobile money; technology diffusion; financial inclusion; inclusive innovation
    JEL: D10 D14 D31 D60 O30
    Date: 2021–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:exs:wpaper:21/021&r=all

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