Financial inclusion is so critical to national economic development that
it is set as a target in eight of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs). FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- Financial inclusion is so critical to national economic development that it is set as a target in eight of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
- It serves as the heartbeat for the collective pledge of ‘leaving no one behind’.
- The 2019 FinAcess Household Survey shows that in Kenya, the adult population with access to formal financial services has dramatically increased from 26.7 percent in 2006 to 82.9 percent in 2019.
- Other innovations include agency banking, digital finance and mobile apps. Mobile money, in particular, has acted as a revolutionary agent for formal financial inclusion.
Financial inclusion is so
critical to national economic development that it is set as a target in
eight of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It serves as the
heartbeat for the collective pledge of ‘leaving no one behind’.
“Merely
having and using a bank account changes women’s lives, by giving them
decision-making power over the family’s finances,” says the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation’s Goalkeeper’s Report, 2019.
This
small but profound change in the decision making capacity in families
has a huge impact on the next generation in developing countries and the
ability of families and by extension, nations to break the cycle of
poverty.
In tandem with possessing a formal account for
individuals, access to affordable credit for the majority of SMEs can,
and has unlocked economic energies and created both wealth and jobs.
Over
the past two decades, however, Kenya to its credit has taken financial
inclusion very seriously and it is a pillar of the country’s long-term
development blueprint Vision 2030 that aims to transform Kenya into a
middle-income country by the year 2030 with its concomitant raising of
living standards.
The 2019 FinAcess Household Survey shows that in Kenya, the
adult population with access to formal financial services has
dramatically increased from 26.7 percent in 2006 to 82.9 percent in
2019.
Other innovations include agency banking, digital
finance and mobile apps. Mobile money, in particular, has acted as a
revolutionary agent for formal financial inclusion.
The
Financial Access Survey (FAS) report 2018 shows that over the past
decade, bank branches grew from 230 in 2004 to 2,833 in 2018.
This
rise reflects a major change in the banking sector culture to include
the previously excluded low-end markets. The steady growth in the
banking sector has also been complemented by agency banking.
According to FSD Kenya 2018, over 80 percent of the Kenyan population is within three km of any financial source point.
The ever improving mobile phone devices have also had a major part to play in the success of expanding financial inclusion.
The
formal sector has also received a substantial boost in its service
through the mobile money platform. The FinAcess data shows that the
urban poor, and mostly the rural populations have become formalised.
While
expansion in this financial infrastructure has been impressive for over
a decade now, access is still facing problems the poorest 55 percent
still face exclusion with usage still very low.
Kenya
remarkably continues to make progress towards improved financial
inclusion, mainly driven by mobile money banking. However, there is
still much to be done to ensure these achievements remain sustainable
and cost effective for poverty reduction and job creation.
The
largest gap in active registered financial accounts at about 27 percent
was between those above and those below the poverty line. This gap
could partly be attributed to lower levels of mobile phone ownership and
financial capabilities. Moreover, there is a correlation between
education and usage of mobile money services.
Benson Senelwa
Adan Shibia
Githinji Njenga
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