Publications /
Paper in Academic Journals

Back
Unveiling the drivers of Africa’s digital financial inclusion journey
Authors
Zakaria Elouaourti
January 31, 2024

This Paper was originally published on onlinelibrary.wiley.com

This study aimed to unveil the evolving landscape of digital financial inclusion in African countries during the post-COVID-19 era. We examined factors influencing the access and usage of digital financial services and identified population segments facing increased exclusion due to the digital divide. First, by applying principal component analysis to data collected at the country level from 39 African countries in 2014, 2017, and 2022, we developed a digital financial inclusion index. Second, the empirical research utilized a microlevel dataset of 29,042 adults from 29 countries, sourced from the World Bank's Global Findex 2021 database, employing the instrumental variable probit methodology. Comparative analysis showed improvements in digital financial inclusion rankings for Kenya, Lesotho, and Botswana, while Egypt, Sudan, Tunisia, and Niger experienced declines, indicating limited access. Our empirical findings suggest that certain groups, such as women and individuals with limited education and lower incomes, encounter obstacles in accessing digital financial services. Factors such as education level, labor market participation and access to technology and internet infrastructure emerged as crucial in promoting digital financial inclusion. Our sample's representative nature enhances the study's practical implications, guiding public policies and international institutions to accelerate digital financial inclusion in Africa.

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Bouchra Rahmouni
    April 30, 2019
    In a globalized world, the ability of countries to innovate is crucial to creating high levels of value added and enhancing economic competitiveness. Silicon Valley, USA, is a development model that many African countries seek to emulate by creating «African Valleys». The success of major US corporations has persuaded a great number of players that new technologies are essential drivers of growth, and several states have implemented policies to stimulate the development of start-ups ...
  • Authors
    Edition et coordination : Abdellatif Chatri
    April 25, 2019
    L’économie marocaine se trouve aujourd’hui à une étape cruciale de son évolution. Le ralentissement tendanciel de la croissance, persistance du chômage de masse, faibles gains de productivité, perte en compétitivité, lenteur de la transformation structurelle, approfondissement des inégalités, déclassement social... etc. sont autant d’indicateurs, dont la liste n’est pas fermée, qui plaident pour le dépassement du modèle de croissance poursuivi depuis plusieurs années. La nécessité d ...
  • Authors
    Mouhamadou Moustapha Ly
    April 18, 2019
    The economic picture in South Africa is clear and well known: low economic growth, high unemployment rates, and constrained fiscal policy threatened by rating agencies. The causes of such situations are diverse and both internal and external. How can growth be boosted? The African continental free trade area offers a great opportunity to South Africa to take advantage of the continent’s more than one billion of potential consumers and build a new growth paradigm based on export (rat ...
  • Authors
    Lorenzo Colantoni
    Giuseppe Montesano
    Nicolò Sartori
    April 12, 2019
    Access to electricity is a key factor for the future of the African continent. Energy poverty and lack of universal access to electricity services are, in fact, remarkably hurting human progress in Africa. Today, sub-Saharan Africa hosts 14 percent of the world’s population but 60 percent of the world’s people without access to electricity: of the more than 1 billion people globally who had no access to electricity, around 600 million lived in the region. In these conditions, many A ...
  • Authors
    April 10, 2019
    Africa is experiencing a demographic boom, so as its population is expected to double by 2050 to reach 2.8 billion. The growth in Africa’s working-age population will be inevitable. The youth population will also grow to make of Africa the continent of youth ‘par excellence’, so as it will hold the largest number of young people in the globe. Source: UN DESA | United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2018 Against this outlook, economic growth is essential for Afric ...
  • Authors
    Mouhamadou Moustapha Ly
    Bertrand Bio Mama
    Onasis Tharcisse A. Guèdègbé
    March 6, 2019
    L’évaluation d’impact des projets et programmes de développement est un exercice qui est de plus en plus adopté dans les pays en développement notamment ceux d’Afrique subsaharienne. Entre autres facteurs explicatifs, il y a la rareté des ressources allouées au développement mais aussi la nécessité de mieux connaître les contraintes structurelles au développement. Saisissant l’occasion de la première conférence de West Africa Capacity building and Impact Evaluation Program (WACIE-3i ...