Digital Revolution Bolsters Financial Inclusion
IMF’s Financial Access Survey exposes gender gap, says Africa is mobile money hub.
WASHINGTON, DC – Oct 3 (The CONNECT) –In a new trend, financial inclusion is being bolstered by the rise in digital financial services, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) says.
IMF’s fourteenth annual Financial Access Survey (FAS) highlighs the resilience of financial access during the tumultuous COVID-19 pandemic years.
Notably, microfinance institutions played a pivotal role in responding to the financial needs of the most vulnerable segments of society.
The FAS data also point to a concerning dip in the outstanding value of commercial bank loans extended to small and medium enterprises (SMEs) relative to GDP, indicating that their ability to access bank financing may be more constrained and/or demand for credit might have weakened due to tighter financing conditions. Additionally, a persistent gender gap in financial access remains a pressing concern.
Digital Financial Services
FAS shows that the means to access finance have seen a seismic shift in recent years. Traditional touchpoints like ATMs and bank branches are witnessing a decline while non-traditional platforms such as retail agents and mobile money agents are surging.
The proliferation of digital financial service access points has inevitably led to a rise in their usage, as measured by the increase in the number and volume of digital financial transactions.
For example, in Africa, a hub for mobile money, the value of these transactions increased from 26 percent to 35 percent of GDP between 2021 and 2022. Meanwhile, in Europe and Western Hemisphere, the preference leans towards mobile and internet banking, where the volume of online banking transactions per 1,000 adults jumped by more than 20 percent in 2022 alone.
Even as bank account uptake has risen globally, there has been a discernible drop in the value of outstanding deposits and loans as a share of GDP across many regions. In the Middle East and Central Asia, for instance, the share of outstanding loans in GDP fell from 59 in 2021 to 55 percent in 2022.
The overall decline in loan values can be partly attributed to the unwinding of COVID-19 policy measures that were enacted to encourage bank lending and tighter monetary policy in response to higher inflation.
Lending to SMEs
After an initial spike during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, there was a decrease in the outstanding loan amounts to SMEs as a share of GDP across many economies in 2022. Of the 61 economies that have consistently reported SME data over the past four years (2019-2022), a large majority (75 percent or 46 economies) reported a decline in outstanding commercial bank loans to SMEs as a share of GDP between 2021 and 2022.
As noted above, this decline can be attributed partly to the unwinding of support measures such as credit guarantees and moratoriums on debt repayments, implemented in 2020 in response to heightened liquidity demands and to stave off potential bankruptcies and job losses in SMEs.
Gender Gaps
The persistence of the gender gap in financial access across many economies, is both concerning and critical to address. While there is some comfort in the fact that account ownership for both men and women has seen a slight increase between 2021 and 2022, the gap between men and women measured by bank account ownership remains significant for several countries.
On average, men own 55 percent more deposit accounts than women in the sample and also hold significantly higher outstanding value of deposits than women. The gender gap widens further if the loan account ownership and outstanding value of loans are taken into consideration.
Monitoring these developments is important, and there is an undeniable need for more granular gender-disaggregated data to analyze and bridge these disparities effectively. The broader implications of the gender gap are significant, with macro-critical effects on economic growth, income inequality, and poverty alleviation.