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The impact of formal financial inclusion on informal financial intermediation and cash preference: evidence from Africa
29
Citations
31
References
2019
Year
Informal Financial IntermediationPublic PolicyEconomicsFintechExcess LiquidityEconomic DevelopmentDevelopment EconomicsFinancial IntermediationFormal Financial InclusionBusinessFinancial InclusionCash PreferenceGlobal Findex 2014Cash TransferInformal EconomyFinancial MechanismFinanceAfrican Development
This paper examines the effect of formal financial intermediation (inclusion) on informal financial intermediation and the use of cash for economic activities. Using data from the Global Findex 2014, we examine whether the use of formal financial intermediaries reduces cash preference and the use of informal financial intermediaries. Our empirical results show that informal financial intermediation is positively associated with formal financial inclusion. This indicates that the relationship between informal and formal financial intermediation is complementary rather than a trade-off, which demonstrates the importance of informal finance plays in the financial system of Africa. Moreover, the use of formal financial intermediaries significantly reduces the preference for holding cash, implying that a robust financial system infrastructure has the potential of mobilizing excess liquidity in the informal economy of Africa for growth and development.
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