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Mobile Money in Tanzania – A Panacea for Financial Inclusion?

Möller, Tim LU (2022) EOSK12 20221
Department of Economic History
Abstract
Despite developments in economic growth theory, the importance of savings and investment has remained consistent. It intrinsically connects to the importance of functioning financial intermediation and high levels of financial inclusion. While Sub-Saharan Africa still lags, Tanzania has during the last decade seen a rapid rise in mobile money services. This paper attempts to answer the potential of this technology in improving financial inclusion, by investigating the usage patterns of it, as well as how it eases in reducing existing constraints of improving the level of formal financial inclusion. Theory suggests that both supply factors, e.g., access, and demand factors, e.g., literacy, are potential constraints. Using multivariate... (More)
Despite developments in economic growth theory, the importance of savings and investment has remained consistent. It intrinsically connects to the importance of functioning financial intermediation and high levels of financial inclusion. While Sub-Saharan Africa still lags, Tanzania has during the last decade seen a rapid rise in mobile money services. This paper attempts to answer the potential of this technology in improving financial inclusion, by investigating the usage patterns of it, as well as how it eases in reducing existing constraints of improving the level of formal financial inclusion. Theory suggests that both supply factors, e.g., access, and demand factors, e.g., literacy, are potential constraints. Using multivariate regressions and qualitative interviews, these constraints help in explaining the current situation. The result show that while mobile money provides financial services to poorer individuals previously unattainable including small-scale loans, savings, and remittances, it should not be viewed as a panacea for conventional forms of financial inclusion. Supply of bank services, income, and literacy are important factors in explaining low levels of bank account ownership, while demand factors also play a role, with uptake gaps falling considerably after controlling for awareness. No causal link appears to exist between mobile money and formal financial inclusion. These constraints point to the importance of a provision of education among older generations, better access to modern infrastructure enabling access to bank branches, and better access to formal employment. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Möller, Tim LU
supervisor
organization
course
EOSK12 20221
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Financial Inclusion, Mobile Money, Bank Account, Tanzania, Growth, Poverty
language
English
id
9093649
date added to LUP
2022-08-19 10:44:07
date last changed
2022-08-19 10:44:07
@misc{9093649,
  abstract     = {{Despite developments in economic growth theory, the importance of savings and investment has remained consistent. It intrinsically connects to the importance of functioning financial intermediation and high levels of financial inclusion. While Sub-Saharan Africa still lags, Tanzania has during the last decade seen a rapid rise in mobile money services. This paper attempts to answer the potential of this technology in improving financial inclusion, by investigating the usage patterns of it, as well as how it eases in reducing existing constraints of improving the level of formal financial inclusion. Theory suggests that both supply factors, e.g., access, and demand factors, e.g., literacy, are potential constraints. Using multivariate regressions and qualitative interviews, these constraints help in explaining the current situation. The result show that while mobile money provides financial services to poorer individuals previously unattainable including small-scale loans, savings, and remittances, it should not be viewed as a panacea for conventional forms of financial inclusion. Supply of bank services, income, and literacy are important factors in explaining low levels of bank account ownership, while demand factors also play a role, with uptake gaps falling considerably after controlling for awareness. No causal link appears to exist between mobile money and formal financial inclusion. These constraints point to the importance of a provision of education among older generations, better access to modern infrastructure enabling access to bank branches, and better access to formal employment.}},
  author       = {{Möller, Tim}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Mobile Money in Tanzania – A Panacea for Financial Inclusion?}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}