通过数字时代的金融技术重新调整金融包容性的范围:数字扫盲在乌干达农村地区的调节作用

George Okello Candiya Bongomin, Charles Akol Malinga, Alain Manzi Amani, Rebecca Balinda
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(2022).FindingsThe findings from this study are threefold: first; the results revealed a positive interaction effect of digital literacy between FinTechs of biometrics and mobile money and digital financial inclusion. Second; the results also confirmed that biometrics identification positively promotes digital financial inclusion. Lastly; the results showed that mobile money positively promotes digital financial inclusion. A combination of FinTechs of biometrics and mobile money together with digital literacy explain 29% variation in digital financial inclusion among the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs in rural Uganda.Research limitations/implicationsThe data for this study were collected mainly from the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs. Further studies may look at data from other sections of the vulnerable population in under developed financial markets. Additionally, the data for this study were collected only from Uganda as a developing country. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的本研究的主要目的是测试数字素养在乌干达农村地区无银行账户的贫困妇女、青年和残疾人(PWDs)中,生物识别技术和移动支付等金融技术(FinTechs)与数字金融包容性之间关系的交互效应。根据 Hair 等人(2022 年)的规定,利用从乌干达四个地区无银行账户的贫困妇女、青年和残疾人那里收集到的数据,采用基于协方差的结构方程模型来构建交互效应。研究结果本研究的结果有三个方面:第一,结果显示生物识别技术和移动支付等金融技术与数字金融包容性之间存在数字素养的正交互效应。其次,研究结果还证实,生物识别技术能积极促进数字金融包容性。最后,结果表明,移动支付对数字金融包容性有积极的促进作用。将生物识别技术和移动支付等金融科技与数字扫盲相结合,可以解释乌干达农村地区无银行账户的贫困妇女、青年和残疾人在数字金融包容性方面 29% 的差异。进一步的研究可能会关注欠发达金融市场中其他弱势群体的数据。此外,本研究的数据仅从作为发展中国家的乌干达收集。因此,可以从其他发展中国家获取更多数据,以得出结论性和普遍性的经验证据。此外,本研究采用了横截面设计来收集数据。实践意义乌干达等发展中国家的政府应支持妇女、青年、残疾人和其他同样弱势的群体,尤其是农村社区的妇女、青年、残疾人和其他同样弱势的群体了解和使用金融科技。这可以通过数字扫盲来实现,数字扫盲可以帮助他们接受数字金融服务,在移动支付等数字平台上熟练地浏览和执行数字交易,而不会出错。此外,乌干达等发展中国家的政府可以利用这一发现,倡导设计适当的数字基础设施,以覆盖偏远地区,确保 "数字金融服务用户的最后一英里连接"。使用离线解决方案可以补充生物识别和移动支付在线网络连接的缺失或损失,从而缩小农村地区巨大的数字鸿沟差距。这可以扩大无银行账户的农村人口获得和使用金融服务的机会。原创性/价值本文进一步阐明了在网络风险肆虐的情况下,数字扫盲在日益复杂多变的全球金融科技生态系统中的重要性。据作者所知,目前将数字素养作为金融科技与数字金融包容性之间关系的调节因素的研究非常有限,尤其是在发展中国家数字金融市场不发达的弱势群体中。这是本文的新颖之处,其数据来自乌干达农村地区没有银行账户的贫困妇女、青年和残疾人。
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Recalibrating the scope of financial inclusion through financial technologies in the digital age: the role of digital literacy as a moderator in rural Uganda
PurposeThe main purpose of this study is to test for the interaction effect of digital literacy in the relationship between financial technologies (FinTechs) of biometrics and mobile money and digital financial inclusion among the unbanked poor women, youth and persons with disabilities (PWDs) in rural Uganda.Design/methodology/approachCovariance-based structural equation modeling was used to construct the interaction effect using data collected from the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs located in the four regions in Uganda as prescribed by Hair et al. (2022).FindingsThe findings from this study are threefold: first; the results revealed a positive interaction effect of digital literacy between FinTechs of biometrics and mobile money and digital financial inclusion. Second; the results also confirmed that biometrics identification positively promotes digital financial inclusion. Lastly; the results showed that mobile money positively promotes digital financial inclusion. A combination of FinTechs of biometrics and mobile money together with digital literacy explain 29% variation in digital financial inclusion among the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs in rural Uganda.Research limitations/implicationsThe data for this study were collected mainly from the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs. Further studies may look at data from other sections of the vulnerable population in under developed financial markets. Additionally, the data for this study were collected only from Uganda as a developing country. Thus, more data may be obtained from other developing countries to draw conclusive and generalized empirical evidence. Besides, the current study used cross sectional design to collect the data. Therefore, future studies may adopt longitudinal research design to investigate the impact of FinTechs on digital financial inclusion in the presence of digital literacy across different time range.Practical implicationsThe governments in developing countries like Uganda should support women, youth, PWDs and other equally vulnerable groups, especially in the rural communities to understand and use FinTechs. This can be achieved through digital literacy that can help them to embrace digital financial services and competently navigate and perform digital transactions over digital platforms like mobile money without making errors. Besides, governments in developing countries like Uganda can use this finding to advocate for the design of appropriate digital infrastructures to reach remote areas and ensure “last mile connectivity for digital financial services' users.” The use of off-line solutions can complement the absence or loss of on-line network connectivity for biometrics and mobile money to close the huge digital divide gap in rural areas. This can scale-up access to and use of financial services by the unbanked rural population.Originality/valueThis paper sheds more light on the importance of digital literacy in the ever complex and dynamic global FinTech ecosystem in the presence of rampant cyber risks. To the best of the authors' knowledge, limited studies currently exist that integrate digital literacy as a moderator in the relationship between FinTechs and digital financial inclusion, especially among vulnerable groups in under-developed digital financial markets in developing countries. This is the novelty of the paper with data obtained from the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs in rural Uganda.
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