The blog discusses why Fintech, in its current form, may be largely irrelevant?
At the recent MasterCard Foundation Symposium on Financial Inclusion, I was asked to participate in the closing debate. A great honour. However, I was asked to support the proposition that “Disruptive innovations in the financial sector can no longer respond to the daily challenges of poor people”. Ouch! For all my critiques of digital financial services and digital credit, arguing this side of the debate is a real challenge. Especially when the potential for innovation and fintech to revolutionise our ability to deliver financial inclusion is so very clear.
MicroSave recognises this potential and has been working closely on a variety of initiatives that support fintechs and incubation labs. We are seeing a large number of extraordinary developments, tools, and solutions that can have a major beneficial impact on the lives of the poor. So arguing that fintech is unable and unlikely to respond to the needs of the poor was a tough ask …
I love fintech. I use fintech every day. I am a fintech fan … but I am privileged and middle class – and so both educated and connected.
However, if we visit a typical rural village in a developing country, we would see that the situation is very different. Fintech, in its current form, may be largely irrelevant. Why so?
According to the World’s Women Report 2015, there are 781 million illiterate people on the planet. The underlying assumption that those that pass Standard V are literate and numerate is fundamentally flawed. These estimates, therefore, significantly understate the size of the problem – perhaps by as much as 100%. In India, for example, “Half of all children in Std V have not yet learned basic skills that they should have learned by Std II.” (Pratham, ASER 2014).
3. Furthermore, most villagers are ‘Oral’. They – along with another 1 billion-plus people across the planet – cannot read, write, or understand the long number strings necessary to transact on mobile phones. This has profound implications for their ability to use digital financial services. Indeed, asking them to move away from counting cash to digital interfaces will remove a key learning opportunity and strand them in a literate environment that they do not comprehend.
4. Fintech is irrelevant for most villagers because providers have made little effort to tailor interfaces or use-cases for the low-income market. The vast majority of fintech providers develop solutions for the affluent and middle classes. This makes logical sense – these segments have the money (and connectivity) to use the solutions. Furthermore, fintech developers typically come from this background. They, therefore, understand the challenges this segment faces and thus the opportunities it provides. In contrast, when and if fintech developers focus on the low-income segments, they tend to create solutions and then look for problems to solve in preference to understanding the needs, aspirations, perceptions and behaviour of the poor first.
5. Furthermore, villagers value personal relationships – particularly when it comes to money. The idea of trusting technology that they do not understand for anything except very basic payments is out of the question. The idea of using a fintech solution on a mobile phone is alien and often even intimidating. This is particularly when the majority of systems they have seen or heard about remain unreliable and offer limited customer support and recourse.
6. Finally, it is quite clear that till date, the regulatory environment and consumer protection provisions remain too weak to secure the poor. Many have already lost money in basic money transfer transactions. Millions are negatively listed on credit bureauxand in the databases of large banks because of digital credit. Furthermore, in the flagship M-PESA deployment, almost half of non-airtime top-up transactions are for gambling … With a track record like this, how can we honestly claim that technology is helping the poor?
Perhaps it is time to take a step back and to reflect beyond the hype. Until we address these six fundamental barriers to the deployment and use of fintech by the poor, it will indeed remain irrelevant to them. In fact, we risk exacerbating the digital divide and leaving the poor and vulnerable behind.
The most basic innovation at the heart of digital financial services is mobile money. Yet GSMA’s State of the Industry Report 2016 tells us that just 12% of the 286 deployments have more than 1 million active users. With such shaky foundations, it is clear that we have a long way to go before fintech can deliver on its promise of bringing services that are accessible and valuable, and thus can provide financial inclusion for the poor.
Leave comments