Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices
In 2011, only 17.3 percemt of adults in Tanzania had an account at a formal financial institution and 56 percemt did not have any access to financial services. Most of the population lives in rural areas with very low incomes and poor infrastructur...
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/271161483700551581/Comparison-with-good-practices http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25884 |
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okr-10986-258842021-04-23T14:04:32Z Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices World Bank Group financial literacy financial consumer protection financial disclosure data protection privacy dispute resolution consumer empowerment banking microfinance pensions In 2011, only 17.3 percemt of adults in Tanzania had an account at a formal financial institution and 56 percemt did not have any access to financial services. Most of the population lives in rural areas with very low incomes and poor infrastructure, and women are especially disadvantaged. Such limited access to formal financial services also inhibits financial literacy – awareness of benefits and risks, and how to take advantage of opportunities. Despite significant challenges, all institutional elements of the formal financial sector in Tanzania are in place, helping its gradual expansion, and in some segments technology is driving rapid growth – particularly in mobile and electronic payments. Still, gaps and weaknesses in financial consumer protection and financial education remain some of the main obstacles to sustainability and greater trust in the financial sector. This Diagnostic Review was requested by the Ministry of Finance of Tanzania in November 2012. It provides a detailed assessment of Tanzania’s institutional, legal and regulatory framework against the World Bank’s Good Practices for Financial Consumer Protection. Three segments of the financial sector have been analyzed: banking, microfinance, and pensions. Insurance and securities segments will be considered at a later stage. Volume I of the Review summarizes the key findings and recommendations and Volume II presents a detailed assessment of each financial segment compared to the Good Practices. 2017-01-23T17:27:43Z 2017-01-23T17:27:43Z 2013-11 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/271161483700551581/Comparison-with-good-practices http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25884 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Financial Accountability Study Economic & Sector Work Africa Tanzania |
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Digital Repositories |
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World Bank |
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English en_US |
topic |
financial literacy financial consumer protection financial disclosure data protection privacy dispute resolution consumer empowerment banking microfinance pensions |
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financial literacy financial consumer protection financial disclosure data protection privacy dispute resolution consumer empowerment banking microfinance pensions World Bank Group Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices |
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Africa Tanzania |
description |
In 2011, only 17.3 percemt of adults in
Tanzania had an account at a formal financial institution
and 56 percemt did not have any access to financial
services. Most of the population lives in rural areas with
very low incomes and poor infrastructure, and women are
especially disadvantaged. Such limited access to formal
financial services also inhibits financial literacy –
awareness of benefits and risks, and how to take advantage
of opportunities. Despite significant challenges, all
institutional elements of the formal financial sector in
Tanzania are in place, helping its gradual expansion, and in
some segments technology is driving rapid growth –
particularly in mobile and electronic payments. Still, gaps
and weaknesses in financial consumer protection and
financial education remain some of the main obstacles to
sustainability and greater trust in the financial sector.
This Diagnostic Review was requested by the Ministry of
Finance of Tanzania in November 2012. It provides a detailed
assessment of Tanzania’s institutional, legal and regulatory
framework against the World Bank’s Good Practices for
Financial Consumer Protection. Three segments of the
financial sector have been analyzed: banking, microfinance,
and pensions. Insurance and securities segments will be
considered at a later stage. Volume I of the Review
summarizes the key findings and recommendations and Volume
II presents a detailed assessment of each financial segment
compared to the Good Practices. |
format |
Report |
author |
World Bank Group |
author_facet |
World Bank Group |
author_sort |
World Bank Group |
title |
Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices |
title_short |
Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices |
title_full |
Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices |
title_fullStr |
Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices |
title_full_unstemmed |
Tanzania Diagnostic Review of Consumer Protection and Financial Literacy : Volume 2. Comparison with Good Practices |
title_sort |
tanzania diagnostic review of consumer protection and financial literacy : volume 2. comparison with good practices |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/271161483700551581/Comparison-with-good-practices http://hdl.handle.net/10986/25884 |
_version_ |
1764460449341898752 |