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Measurement in Financial Inclusion


The increasing prominence of financial inclusion as a tool for development and growth has spawned extensive data-gathering initiatives to measure, understand and improve it. The result is a variety of new measurement frameworks that leverage this data.

Early indications suggest that financial inclusion targets (such as the percentage of adults with a bank account) remain valid, but they don’t tell you much when tracked in isolation. Are people actually using their financial services, can serve as a useful measurement of consumer status or outcomes, and, more importantly, what is the impact on livelihoods?

See how we are working to change the way financial inclusion is viewed and the data used to measure it.

The Latest in Measurement in Financial Inclusion

Why digital payments are not replacing cash
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Completing the picture in ASEAN
This blog series seeks to generate a broader discussion on the data that is needed to close the gender gap in financial inclusion in ASEAN. A [...]
Why bank account access does not translate into usage
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Learning from the popularity of local financial service providers
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i2i brochure
The availability of data in financial inclusion has grown tremendously in recent years. Data initiatives such as the World Bank’s Findex, [...]
First impressions from a more granular approach to client typology
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