Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises

Access to financial services has long been believed to lift people out of poverty by allowing them to seize economic opportunities and increase their welfare. Despite rapid progress of 700 million people gaining access to formal financial services,...

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Main Author: Independent Evaluation Group
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/641411539266866033/Financial-Inclusion-A-Foothold-on-the-Ladder-toward-Prosperity
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35153
id okr-10986-35153
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-351532021-04-23T14:02:18Z Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises Independent Evaluation Group FINANCIAL INCLUSION FINANCIAL SERVICES POVERTY REDUCTION OPERATIONAL ENGAGEMENT WORLD BANK GROUP OPERATIONS CREDIT SAVINGS MICRO INSURANCE GENDER GLOBAL PARTNERSHIPS IFC PORTFOLIO MIGA GUARANTEES POLICY REFORM SERVICES TO THE POOR Access to financial services has long been believed to lift people out of poverty by allowing them to seize economic opportunities and increase their welfare. Despite rapid progress of 700 million people gaining access to formal financial services, 2 billion remain excluded. Financial inclusion -- access by poor families and microenterprises to financial services -- has been an objective of the World Bank Group for a long time, reaffirmed in 2013 by President Jim Kim’s commitment to the Universal Access Goal by 2020. This evaluation examines the relevance and effectiveness of seven years (FY07-13) of World Bank Group support to financial inclusion and its impact on the poor. It found that the World Bank Group contributed significantly to progress in financial inclusion globally and in client countries. It has “reached” a substantial share of the microfinance industry. Its support is strategically aligned with countries’ needs, focusing primarily on countries with low inclusion rates and addressing development priorities. The Bank Group has also contributed to the sustainability of microfinance services. Yet the Bank Group’s approach to identify and tackle constraints to financial inclusion at the country level is not sufficiently comprehensive. This is of particular concern for areas that are not subject to prudential regulations, like mobile money and rural savings and credit cooperatives. Even though the Bank Group was able to leverage its impact through international partnerships, these bear costs and risks and often lack results frameworks. But most importantly, the commitment to the Universal Access Goal and the resulting “push” for enabling access to financial services through transaction accounts may create a bias for driving up sheer access numbers. This may be problematic for several reasons: (i) access does not necessarily lead to inclusion, given high dormancy rates of newly created accounts; (ii) the link between access to finance and poverty alleviation is neither certain nor well understood, given the evidence that, in spite of modest benefits, the promise of microfinance pulling millions out of poverty has not been fulfilled; and (iii) current trends suggest one billion people may still lack access by 2020. These remaining financially excluded will increasingly be broadly distributed across many countries and predominantly in rural areas. Providing access to them is likely to require subsidization. Striking a balance between the costs and benefits of universal inclusion and weighing these against the cost and benefits of other competing development priorities will be essential. 2021-02-22T18:47:48Z 2021-02-22T18:47:48Z 2015-06-29 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/641411539266866033/Financial-Inclusion-A-Foothold-on-the-Ladder-toward-Prosperity http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35153 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic FINANCIAL INCLUSION
FINANCIAL SERVICES
POVERTY REDUCTION
OPERATIONAL ENGAGEMENT
WORLD BANK GROUP OPERATIONS
CREDIT
SAVINGS
MICRO INSURANCE
GENDER
GLOBAL PARTNERSHIPS
IFC PORTFOLIO
MIGA GUARANTEES
POLICY REFORM
SERVICES TO THE POOR
spellingShingle FINANCIAL INCLUSION
FINANCIAL SERVICES
POVERTY REDUCTION
OPERATIONAL ENGAGEMENT
WORLD BANK GROUP OPERATIONS
CREDIT
SAVINGS
MICRO INSURANCE
GENDER
GLOBAL PARTNERSHIPS
IFC PORTFOLIO
MIGA GUARANTEES
POLICY REFORM
SERVICES TO THE POOR
Independent Evaluation Group
Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises
description Access to financial services has long been believed to lift people out of poverty by allowing them to seize economic opportunities and increase their welfare. Despite rapid progress of 700 million people gaining access to formal financial services, 2 billion remain excluded. Financial inclusion -- access by poor families and microenterprises to financial services -- has been an objective of the World Bank Group for a long time, reaffirmed in 2013 by President Jim Kim’s commitment to the Universal Access Goal by 2020. This evaluation examines the relevance and effectiveness of seven years (FY07-13) of World Bank Group support to financial inclusion and its impact on the poor. It found that the World Bank Group contributed significantly to progress in financial inclusion globally and in client countries. It has “reached” a substantial share of the microfinance industry. Its support is strategically aligned with countries’ needs, focusing primarily on countries with low inclusion rates and addressing development priorities. The Bank Group has also contributed to the sustainability of microfinance services. Yet the Bank Group’s approach to identify and tackle constraints to financial inclusion at the country level is not sufficiently comprehensive. This is of particular concern for areas that are not subject to prudential regulations, like mobile money and rural savings and credit cooperatives. Even though the Bank Group was able to leverage its impact through international partnerships, these bear costs and risks and often lack results frameworks. But most importantly, the commitment to the Universal Access Goal and the resulting “push” for enabling access to financial services through transaction accounts may create a bias for driving up sheer access numbers. This may be problematic for several reasons: (i) access does not necessarily lead to inclusion, given high dormancy rates of newly created accounts; (ii) the link between access to finance and poverty alleviation is neither certain nor well understood, given the evidence that, in spite of modest benefits, the promise of microfinance pulling millions out of poverty has not been fulfilled; and (iii) current trends suggest one billion people may still lack access by 2020. These remaining financially excluded will increasingly be broadly distributed across many countries and predominantly in rural areas. Providing access to them is likely to require subsidization. Striking a balance between the costs and benefits of universal inclusion and weighing these against the cost and benefits of other competing development priorities will be essential.
format Report
author Independent Evaluation Group
author_facet Independent Evaluation Group
author_sort Independent Evaluation Group
title Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises
title_short Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises
title_full Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises
title_fullStr Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises
title_full_unstemmed Financial Inclusion - A Foothold on the Ladder toward Prosperity? : An Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises
title_sort financial inclusion - a foothold on the ladder toward prosperity? : an evaluation of world bank group support for financial inclusion for low-income households and microenterprises
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/641411539266866033/Financial-Inclusion-A-Foothold-on-the-Ladder-toward-Prosperity
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35153
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