This is the second post of a two-part blog that distills the conversation from our last webinar, on digital money, with FAI’s Tim Ogden and financial policy expert Jesse McWaters, Head of Global Digital Public Policy at Mastercard. The first part covered some basic frameworks for thinking about these concepts. This one covers the regulatory environment around digital systems.
This two-part blog post distills the conversation from that webinar. The first part covered some basic frameworks for thinking about these concepts. This one covers the regulatory environment around digital systems.
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In our December faiVLive webinar, FAI’s Tim Ogden sat down with financial policy expert Jesse McWaters, Head of Global Digital Public Policy at Mastercard, to demystify some basic questions around digital money and its evolving role in financial inclusion. What’s the difference between a digital payment system and a digital currency? What is blockchain really and how should we use it? Who makes the rules in a decentralized digital money system? Do those rules protect or expose consumers? Can the offerings and their regulations be designed to be pro-poor?
This two-part blog post distills the conversation from that webinar. This one covers some basic frameworks for thinking about these concepts. The next will cover the regulatory environment around digital systems.
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Join FAI’s Tim Ogden in conversation with Jesse McWaters, the Global Head of Regulatory Advocacy at Mastercard, to explore some basic frameworks for understanding the differences between the rapidly growing types of digital currencies. Through this session you’ll gain a better grasp of new and evolving digital means of exchange, how they interact, and what that means for pro-poor financial inclusion.
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In 2009, FAI founder Jonathan Morduch was part of a group that determined “half the world is unbanked.” Ten years later, the latest Global Findex tells us that the world’s unbanked population has been nearly cut in half …
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In 2009, FAI founder Jonathan Morduch was part of a group that determined “half the world is unbanked.” Twenty years later, the latest Global Findex tells us that the world’s unbanked population has been nearly cut in half …
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Last month, we gathered a group of expert panelists from around the world for a faiVLive on the possibilities for fintech to serve the poor and reduce inequality. What have we learned about where fintech advances inclusion, and when it creates a new (digital) divide?
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What gets measured gets managed? Not always. We tracked the diversity of the sources featured in our faiV newsletter, and here’s what we found. While we still haven’t made up our minds on what the right targets are or how to get there, we are convinced that more people keeping track of and reporting data on these dimensions is an important part of figuring out how to get it right.
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Welcome to today’s faiVLive Webinar. With a group of expert panelists from around the world, we delve into the possibilities for FinTech to serve the poor and reduce inequality. Six years after McKinsey heralded “a new era of digital globalization,” what have we learned about when, and where, FinTech meaningfully advances inclusion, and when it creates a new (digital) divide? When does FinTech (in the words of Greg Chen of CGAP, during this edition of the faiVLive) build a bridge and when does it dig a moat?
We also explore how expectations seem to differ from place to place: while FinTech in developing countries is generally presumed to be pro-poor, in wealthier countries there is more skepticism that digital innovations will advance inclusion for the poorest in society. Why is that? What are appropriate expectations of FinTech innovation? Should we be more skeptical of FinTech in countries with large inclusion gaps? Should we be less skeptical of new business models and tech-enabled services in wealthy countries?
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FinTech in developing countries is generally presumed to be pro-poor, while in wealthier countries there is more skepticism that digital innovations will advance inclusion for the poorest in society. Why is that? What are appropriate expectations of FinTech innovation? Should we be more skeptical of FinTech in countries with large inclusion gaps? Should we be less skeptical of new business models and tech-enabled services in wealthy countries? Join Tim Ogden, Managing Director of the Financial Access Initiative, as we discuss the expectations and potential of FinTech to increase inclusion with an expert panel from around the world.
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This post is co-authored by Timothy Ogden and Julia Brand.
Why April 2021 should be the last Financial Literacy Month, and what we think should replace it.
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What should we measure (besides profits) to better understand business success? Wy do women choose some sectors over others?
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Complaints – whether expressed on social media or through formal grievance redress channels – are transparent windows into what consumers are thinking and experiencing. They are a critical source of information for protecting consumers, but they require care in interpretation and response.
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Last week FAI hosted a webinar on the Gender Profit Gap to talk about why women’s businesses are smaller, grow less, and earn less, than men’s businesses. Below, some reflections from the literature on what can be done to empower women entrepreneurs.
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A growing number of cities across the United States are testing out guaranteed income pilots, which give regular sums (between $100 - $1000) to primarily low-income residents. As USA Today reported on March 4, these pilots are a part of a wider discourse that supports guaranteed income as a mechanism to fight income instability, wealth inequality for low-income families, and to protect against unexpected shocks such as COVID-induced unemployment. “Guaranteed income has become more critical in the longer-term as the nation’s gig economy spawns a growing population of freelance and contract workers who don’t receive benefits and whose income fluctuates from week to week,” said FAI’s Executive Director Jonathan Morduch, who is part of the research team designing a pilot in Compton, California.
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Welcome to Accounting for the Gender Profit Gap, with Nava Ashraf, Morgan Hardy, and Tatiana Rincón, and moderated by Tim Ogden. Join the faiVLive webinar, or register to watch a recording when the webinar is over, here. Here’s some key research that we’ll be discussing in the webinar.
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Join us on Tuesday, March 2 as we bring together leading experts to explore innovative research around the reasons behind gender differences in the profitability and growth of small firms, and ways to better meet the needs of female entrepreneurs.
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A recent experiment by researchers Jean N. Lee, Jonathan Morduch, Saravana Ravindran, Abu Shonchoy, and Hassan Zaman studied the interplay between rural-to-urban migration in Bangladesh, and the introduction of mobile banking to modernize remittances.
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Between March and May of 2020, millions of urban workers across Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan lost their livelihoods and were forced back to their villages. “We may look back at this moment as The Great Reverse Migration,” wrote the authors of a study that tracked the relationship between these migration patterns and the spread of the virus.
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Why should digital lenders support consumer protection principles and practices? What’s in it for them? After a decade of experience with digital lending, it’s high time to answer this question.
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Last week’s edition of the faiVLive—co-presented with the Aspen Institute Financial Security Program—brought together researchers and practitioners to look at how low-income households use short-term savings, and what formal and informal financial tools and product features can help them achieve their savings goals.
A short recap of some highlights follows, but if you missed the webinar, you can still watch it HERE.
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