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Effect of Financial Inclusion on Poverty and Vulnerability to Poverty: Evidence Using a Multidimensional Measure of Financial Inclusion
by
Villano, Renato A.
, Hadley, David
, Koomson, Isaac
in
Banking
/ Correspondence analysis
/ Developing countries
/ Female headed households
/ Financial inclusion
/ Financial services
/ Households
/ Human Geography
/ LDCs
/ Least Squares Statistics
/ Low income groups
/ Microeconomics
/ Money
/ Original Research
/ Poverty
/ Private sector
/ Public finance
/ Public Health
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Rural communities
/ Rural poverty
/ Social Sciences
/ Sociology
/ Standard of living
/ Urban areas
/ Urban poverty
/ Vulnerability
2020
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Effect of Financial Inclusion on Poverty and Vulnerability to Poverty: Evidence Using a Multidimensional Measure of Financial Inclusion
by
Villano, Renato A.
, Hadley, David
, Koomson, Isaac
in
Banking
/ Correspondence analysis
/ Developing countries
/ Female headed households
/ Financial inclusion
/ Financial services
/ Households
/ Human Geography
/ LDCs
/ Least Squares Statistics
/ Low income groups
/ Microeconomics
/ Money
/ Original Research
/ Poverty
/ Private sector
/ Public finance
/ Public Health
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Rural communities
/ Rural poverty
/ Social Sciences
/ Sociology
/ Standard of living
/ Urban areas
/ Urban poverty
/ Vulnerability
2020
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Do you wish to request the book?
Effect of Financial Inclusion on Poverty and Vulnerability to Poverty: Evidence Using a Multidimensional Measure of Financial Inclusion
by
Villano, Renato A.
, Hadley, David
, Koomson, Isaac
in
Banking
/ Correspondence analysis
/ Developing countries
/ Female headed households
/ Financial inclusion
/ Financial services
/ Households
/ Human Geography
/ LDCs
/ Least Squares Statistics
/ Low income groups
/ Microeconomics
/ Money
/ Original Research
/ Poverty
/ Private sector
/ Public finance
/ Public Health
/ Quality of Life Research
/ Rural communities
/ Rural poverty
/ Social Sciences
/ Sociology
/ Standard of living
/ Urban areas
/ Urban poverty
/ Vulnerability
2020
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Effect of Financial Inclusion on Poverty and Vulnerability to Poverty: Evidence Using a Multidimensional Measure of Financial Inclusion
Journal Article
Effect of Financial Inclusion on Poverty and Vulnerability to Poverty: Evidence Using a Multidimensional Measure of Financial Inclusion
2020
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Overview
This study examines the effect of financial inclusion on poverty and vulnerability to poverty of Ghanaian households. Using data extracted from the seventh round of the Ghana Living Standards Survey in 2016/17, a multiple correspondence analysis is employed to generate a financial inclusion index, and three-stage feasible least squares is used to estimate households’ vulnerability to poverty. Endogeneity associated with financial inclusion is resolved using distance to the nearest bank as an instrument in an instrumental variables probit technique. Results showed that while 23.4% of Ghanaians are considered poor, about 51% are vulnerable to poverty. We found that an increase in financial inclusion has two effects on household poverty. First, it is associated with a decline in a household’s likelihood of being poor by 27%. Second, it prevents a household’s exposure to future poverty by 28%. Female-headed households have a greater chance of experiencing a larger reduction in poverty and vulnerability to poverty through enhanced financial inclusion than do male-headed households. Furthermore, financial inclusion reduces poverty and vulnerability to poverty more in rural than in urban areas. Governments are encouraged to design or enhance policies that provide an enabling environment for the private sector to innovate and expand financial services to more distant places. Government investment in, and regulation of, the mobile money industry will be a necessary step to enhancing financial inclusion in developing countries.
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