1st Edition

Financial Inclusion for Poverty Alleviation Issues and Case Studies for Sustainable Development

Edited By Essam Yassin Mohammed, Zenebe Uraguchi Copyright 2018
    278 Pages 66 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    278 Pages 66 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    More than one billion people still live below the poverty line – most of them in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. Financial inclusion is a major issue, as more than three-quarters of the numbers of poor and disadvantaged women and men do not have access to financial products and services, such as bank accounts, affordable and suitable loans, and insurance.

    The key objective of this book is to provide practical case studies of financial inclusion, rather than focus on academic debates such as the ideological basis of promoting microfinance. Using the recently adopted Sustainable Development Goals as an overall framing of the issues, it shows how poor and disadvantaged women and men can be bankable if the right facilitation for maximizing opportunities and addressing constraints are in place. Case studies confirm that achieving inclusive and sustainable access to financial products and services goes beyond simply enabling poor and disadvantaged women and men to have access to credit, or the ability to open a bank account. Examples from Africa, Asia and Latin America demonstrate encouraging progress in making microcredit accessible to millions of poor people. The foremost challenge, however, has been to ensure that they have access to, and usage intensity of, suitable and affordable financial products and services that meet the needs of their livelihoods as well as risks and mitigation strategies. This requires understanding that poor and disadvantaged women and men do not exist in isolation from complex and interdependent functions in the financial system, which includes a number of actors, diversified services, constraints (not just symptoms) and capacities and incentives.

    Overall, the book provides a rich source of examples of how building inclusive financial systems can empower the world's poor – by increasing income and employment opportunities, securing livelihoods and reducing poverty.

    1. Introduction
    2. Zenebe Bashaw Uraguchi and Essam Yassin Mohammed

    3. From Access to Progress: Setting Our Sights on a Worthier Goal
    4. Leah Wardle

    5. The Bangladesh Experience on Financial Inclusion: A Market Systems Review
    6. Md. Rubaiyath Sarwar and Md. Ashraful Alam

    7. Financial Inclusion: Understanding Concept, Barriers and Measurement
    8. Rashmi Arora

    9. Towards inclusion through lessons from informal money lenders
    10. Camilla Andersson, Erik Holmgren, James MacGregor and Jesper Stage

    11. Extending access to the formal financial system: the Banking Correspondent business model
    12. Noelia Cámara

    13. Savings as Forward Payments: Innovations on Mobile Money Platforms
    14. Ignacio Mas

    15. Mobile Money and Financial Inclusion: The Case of Susu Operations in Ghana
    16. Eric Osei-Assibey

    17. Towards a gender transformative approach to financial inclusion: Lessons from CARE’s Village Savings and Loan Associations in sub-Saharan Africa
    18. Gerry Boyle

    19. Gender-based barriers and opportunities to financial inclusion: New evidence from Ghana
    20. Christian S. Otchia

    21. Islamic Finance Approach to Financial Inclusion to Enhance Shared-Prosperity
    22. Ayse Nur Aydin and Zamir Iqbal

    23. Vulnerability Reduction Efficacy of Financial Inclusion to Climate and Economic Changes: Evidences, Bottlenecks and Way Forward
    24. S.V.R.K. Prabhakar

    25. Green Microedit-Assisted Microenterprises in a Wetland Area of Bangladesh and its Implications for Women's Empowerment and Ecological Sustainability
    26. Khurshed Alam, Md. Habibur Rahman and Mohammed Salim Uddin

    27. Where to from here?

    Essam Yassin Mohammed and Zenebe Bashaw Uraguchi

     

    Biography

    Essam Yassin Mohammed is Senior Economist, Sustainable Markets Group, at the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED), London, UK.

    Zenebe Bashaw Uraguchi is Senior Advisor, Market Systems Development, and Programme Coordinator, Eastern Europe Unit, for Helvetas Swiss Intercooperation, Switzerland.