…700m
are new account holders
In a new
report at the ongoing Spring Meetings of The World Bank and International
Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington D.C. bodies’ claims number of
"unbanked" individuals dropped 20 percent to 2 billion adults.
It
however noted, “Between 2011 and 2014, 700 million people became account
holders at banks, other financial institutions, or mobile money service
providers.”
"Access
to financial services can serve as a bridge out of poverty. We have set a
hugely ambitious goal - universal financial access by 2020 - and now we have
evidence that we’re making major progress," said World Bank Group
President Jim Yong Kim. "This effort will require many partners - credit
card companies, banks, microcredit institutions, the United Nations,
foundations, and community leaders. But we can do it, and the payoff will be
millions of people lifted out of poverty."
Between
2011 and 2014, the percentage of adults with an account increased from 51
percent to 62 percent, a trend driven by a 13 percentage point rise in account
ownership in developing countries and the role of technology, the report noted.
“In
particular, mobile money accounts in Sub-Saharan Africa are helping to rapidly
expand and scale up access to financial services. Along with these gains, data
also show big opportunities for boosting financial inclusion among women and
poor people,” it added.
The
findings come in the latest edition of the Global Findex, the world’s most
comprehensive gauge of progress on financial inclusion. Financial inclusion,
measured by the Global Findex as having an account that allows adults to store
money and make and receive electronic payments, is critical to ending global
poverty. Studies according to the World Bank, show that broader access to, and
participation in, the financial system can boost job creation, increase
investments in education, and directly help poor people manage risk and absorb
financial shocks.
The 2014
Findex found there is still more work to be done to expand financial inclusion
among women and the poorest households. More than half of adults in the poorest
40 percent of households in developing countries were still without accounts in
2014. And the gender gap in account ownership is not significantly narrowing:
In 2011, 47 percent of women and 54 percent of men had an account; in 2014, 58
percent of women had an account, compared to 65 percent of men. Regionally, the
gender gap is largest in South Asia, where 37 percent of women have an account
compared to 55 percent of men (an 18 percentage point gap).

No comments:
Post a Comment