FinDev Blog

Last Mile Financial Inclusion: What Will It Take to Reach More Rural Women?

User-friendly digital services combined with training may be key. Learn more at #SEEP2017
Farming in Kenya. Photo credit: Wim Opmeer, 2016 CGAP Photo Contest.

This post originally appeared on the SEEP Blog.

Financial inclusion is unlocking the potential for micro and small enterprises in poor and rural communities to grow, and reducing gender inequalities. Women with access to financial services including bank accounts and savings mechanisms are better able to control their earnings, and make personal and productive expenditures. Improved financial inclusion may give women more choice in how they use their time - whether for employment, leisure, or education – and foster more substantive autonomy in decisions ranging from employment and marriage, to using contraception. Financial services can help women grow their businesses, choose where and how to work, and raise their productivity and earnings.

The Gender Gap in Financial Inclusion

Conventional financial products and services still do not reach many poor women, especially in so-called “last mile” rural locations. According to the 2014 Global Findex data, only 57% of women worldwide have a financial account, compared to 64% of men. The gap widens as you go down the income ladder: poor women are 28% less likely than poor men to have a formal bank account. Further, the International Financial Corporation estimates that over 70% of women-owned small and medium enterprises (SMEs) have inadequate or no access to financial services.

In South Horr, a community in Kenya’s vast rural north, a woman withdraws cash using mobile money transfer services. Digital platforms are often not designed with rural entrepreneurs and community members in mind. Photo: David duChemin, BOMA Project

New, low-cost digital platforms present opportunities to extend meaningful financial inclusion for the rural poor. Financial service providers are debuting innovative digital services with the potential to overcome challenges of geography, reduce transaction costs, and increase transparency and therefore trust in financial systems. Users’ privacy and financial autonomy are enhanced with digital products and platforms, which help reduce the risk of having funds diverted or appropriated by others.

Is Digitization Enough?

Yet digitization of financial services alone is not enough to improve the lives of low-income women in rural communities. Our work in Tanzania and Kenya shows that despite the fast spread of mobile money and other digital services in urban areas, significant barriers remain for poor, rural women with low literacy rates to uptake and use the services. To expand the reach of digital inclusion platforms, we need interfaces that work for women with low literacy, and investments in information and training to help women use the newest products. Knowledge of financial services and key concepts of interest, debt and surplus is fundamental, along with user-friendly technology.

Learning at #SEEP2017

At the upcoming SEEP conference, the BOMA Project and REPOA, in partnership with ICRW, will share learnings from research and interventions in gender and financial inclusion funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Our session will highlight strategies, capacity-building, and product design innovations that are relevant to the broader development community. Meaningful financial inclusion – and the reduction in poverty it can bring – demands attention to both access to and use of financial products and services. Much work remains to be done in addressing the gender gap and the disproportionate exclusion of rural women from digital financial options and opportunities.


2017 SEEP Annual Conference: Catalyzing Transformative Change_Banner

The Microfinance Gateway is proud to be an outreach partner for the 2017 SEEP Network Annual Conference, with the theme of Catalyzing Transformative Change.

This post originally appeared on the SEEP Blog.

 

Leave a Comment

Comments on this page are moderated by FinDev Editors. We welcome comments that offer remarks and insights that are relevant to the post. Learn More