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Bridging the Gap between Formal and Informal Finance

Uitto, Heidi LU (2020) EKHS21 20201
Department of Economic History
Abstract
Financial inclusion, defined as access and usage of formal financial services, has several positive micro and macro-level socio-economic implications. Due to decades of vigorous policies aiming at lowering barriers to formal finance, 80 percent of Indians now own a bank account. However, there is a significant gap between account take up and usage. One reason for low usage rate is persistent informal saving. The purpose of this thesis is to shed more light on what affects propensity to save formally and informally via different saving vehicles, namely bank accounts, gold, social networks and self-help groups (SHGs). By using a series of multivariate logistic regression models, this thesis analysed a comprehensive and recent household... (More)
Financial inclusion, defined as access and usage of formal financial services, has several positive micro and macro-level socio-economic implications. Due to decades of vigorous policies aiming at lowering barriers to formal finance, 80 percent of Indians now own a bank account. However, there is a significant gap between account take up and usage. One reason for low usage rate is persistent informal saving. The purpose of this thesis is to shed more light on what affects propensity to save formally and informally via different saving vehicles, namely bank accounts, gold, social networks and self-help groups (SHGs). By using a series of multivariate logistic regression models, this thesis analysed a comprehensive and recent household dataset from India. The main findings are: 1) women and men are as likely to save, but they have different saving preferences, 2) social networks play an important role in sustaining informal finance, 3) financial literacy does not have a statistically significant impact on savings, and 4) some financial inclusion policies have a negative effect on propensity to save formally. Since different saving vehicles carry multiple purposes, it might be difficult to fully substitute informal saving. For instance, the risk sharing and the social capital function of saving via social networks or the cultural dimensions of women owning gold cannot directly be substituted by formal finance. Our recommendation is to shift the focus to demand-side financial inclusion policies with special focus on women and economically vulnerable groups. (Less)
Popular Abstract
Financial inclusion, defined as access and usage of formal financial services, has several positive micro and macro-level socio-economic implications. Due to decades of vigorous policies aiming at lowering barriers to formal finance, 80 percent of Indians now own a bank account. However, there is a significant gap between account take up and usage. One reason for low usage rate is persistent informal saving. The purpose of this thesis is to shed more light on what affects propensity to save formally and informally via different saving vehicles, namely bank accounts, gold, social networks and self-help groups (SHGs). By using a series of multivariate logistic regression models, this thesis analysed a comprehensive and recent household... (More)
Financial inclusion, defined as access and usage of formal financial services, has several positive micro and macro-level socio-economic implications. Due to decades of vigorous policies aiming at lowering barriers to formal finance, 80 percent of Indians now own a bank account. However, there is a significant gap between account take up and usage. One reason for low usage rate is persistent informal saving. The purpose of this thesis is to shed more light on what affects propensity to save formally and informally via different saving vehicles, namely bank accounts, gold, social networks and self-help groups (SHGs). By using a series of multivariate logistic regression models, this thesis analysed a comprehensive and recent household dataset from India. The main findings are: 1) women and men are as likely to save, but they have different saving preferences, 2) social networks play an important role in sustaining informal finance, 3) financial literacy does not have a statistically significant impact on savings, and 4) some financial inclusion policies have a negative effect on propensity to save formally. Since different saving vehicles carry multiple purposes, it might be difficult to fully substitute informal saving. For instance, the risk sharing and the social capital function of saving via social networks or the cultural dimensions of women owning gold cannot directly be substituted by formal finance. Our recommendation is to shift the focus to demand-side financial inclusion policies with special focus on women and economically vulnerable groups. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Uitto, Heidi LU
supervisor
organization
alternative title
Determinants of saving in India
course
EKHS21 20201
year
type
H1 - Master's Degree (One Year)
subject
keywords
financial inclusion, propensity to save, informal finance, development, gender
language
English
id
9020082
date added to LUP
2020-07-03 12:04:11
date last changed
2020-07-03 12:04:11
@misc{9020082,
  abstract     = {{Financial inclusion, defined as access and usage of formal financial services, has several positive micro and macro-level socio-economic implications. Due to decades of vigorous policies aiming at lowering barriers to formal finance, 80 percent of Indians now own a bank account. However, there is a significant gap between account take up and usage. One reason for low usage rate is persistent informal saving. The purpose of this thesis is to shed more light on what affects propensity to save formally and informally via different saving vehicles, namely bank accounts, gold, social networks and self-help groups (SHGs). By using a series of multivariate logistic regression models, this thesis analysed a comprehensive and recent household dataset from India. The main findings are: 1) women and men are as likely to save, but they have different saving preferences, 2) social networks play an important role in sustaining informal finance, 3) financial literacy does not have a statistically significant impact on savings, and 4) some financial inclusion policies have a negative effect on propensity to save formally. Since different saving vehicles carry multiple purposes, it might be difficult to fully substitute informal saving. For instance, the risk sharing and the social capital function of saving via social networks or the cultural dimensions of women owning gold cannot directly be substituted by formal finance. Our recommendation is to shift the focus to demand-side financial inclusion policies with special focus on women and economically vulnerable groups.}},
  author       = {{Uitto, Heidi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Bridging the Gap between Formal and Informal Finance}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}