5 research outputs found
The Development of India’s Financial Inclusion Agenda—Some Lessons for Pakistan
Financial Inclusion has assumed a vital position in the Public
Policy discourse of developing economies. Provision of financial
services to the otherwise excluded strata of the society enhances their
potential to climb the economic ladder of opportunity and prosperity.
Access to financial services to the otherwise excluded impacts their
quality of life and enables the less privileged to increase and
diversify their incomes, improve their social and economic conditions.
Due to lack of access to financial services, most poor households have
to rely on their meagre savings or money lenders which limit their
ability to actively participate and benefit from the development
process. The main theoretical arguments that economic theory postulates
regarding the failure of financial markets in percolating poor and rural
areas are of informational asymmetries, difficulties in contract
designing and enforcement, greater transaction costs. The demand side
aspects may be low demand for such services, arising from illiteracy,
less investment opportunities in rural areas and difficult loan
contracts [Basu (2006)]. When households are access constrained with
respect to financial services, it becomes one of the important reasons
for persisting inequalities. Economic theory suggests that unrelenting
inequalities has a negative impact on the long term growth prospects of
an economy [World Bank (2007)]. While establishing causality between
financial development and economic growth has been quite tedious, with
no simple answers, the evidence of a strong link between financial
development and economic growth has continued to rise [Gattoo and Akhtar
(2014)]. The interest in the financial inclusion discourse across
developing and developing world stems from the recognition that a strong
and vibrant financial system does not necessarily imply increasing
financial to all across the societal divide [Honohan (2003)]