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FINANCIAL INCLUSION, RATHER THAN SIZE, IS THE KEY TO TACKLING INCOME INEQUALITY
109
Citations
3
References
2017
Year
Income SecurityIncome JusticeDevelopment EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentEducationIncome DistributionIncome InequalityPovertyWealth JusticeEconomic InequalityFiscal PolicySocial InequalityEconomicsPublic PolicyHousehold StudiesInclusive GrowthLoansFinanceBusinessIncome StudiesRather Than SizeFinancial InclusionMicro Finance InstitutionInequality
In this paper, we assess empirically whether financial inclusion contributes to reducing income inequality when controlling for other key factors, such as economic development and fiscal policy. We conclude that financial inclusion contributes to reducing income inequality to a significant degree, while the size of the financial sector does not. Although our results are still preliminary and constrained by data limitations, they still bear significant policy implications. More specifically, fostering financial inclusion has one more important by-product, which had hardly been analyzed yet, namely reducing income inequality. More specifically, given the broad definition of financial inclusion used in our analysis, promoting financial inclusion implies facilitating the use of credit to low-income households, as well as granting credit to small and medium-sized enterprises.
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