Greener Journal of Economics and Accountancy

Excellence and Timeliness

Change Language

Newsletters


Advertisement


Iwedi

Greener Journal of Economics and Accountancy

Vol. 8(1), pp. 1-5, 2020

ISSN: 2354-2357

Copyright ©2020, the copyright of this article is retained by the author(s)

https://gjournals.org/GJEA

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Financial Inclusion in Nigeria: An Evaluation of the Progress, Challenges and Trend

 

 

Iwedi, Marshal (PhD)

 

 

Department of Banking and Finance, Rivers State University, Port Harcourt, Nigeria

 

 

ARTICLE INFO

ABSTRACT

 

Article No.: 070720084

Type: Research

 

 

The gap between the financially reached and the unreached (banked and unbanked) is enormous in Nigeria even after 58 years of independence and 7 years of launching the Nigeria National Financial inclusion strategy, bulk of the adult population still remains financially excluded. Despite the progress made, the financial exclusion rate stood at 34.5% in 2018 from 46.3% in 2010. With this statistics, it shows that Nigeria as a nation still operates with large volume of physical cash for financial transaction. The importance of financially including the numbers of Nigeria without access to financial services is informed by the potential of accumulating and mobilizing bulk of deposits or saving outside the banking system which will form part of investible funds that will promote productive activity as well as leads to inclusive growth. This paper explores the state of financial inclusion in Nigeria, the progress made, barriers to financial inclusion and its potential impact on the Nigerian economy. The paper discovered and identified that the main challenges to financial inclusion remains high rate poverty among Nigerians, institutional exclusion and the poor’s financial behavior. These challenges are responsible for the shallow depth of financial inclusion in Nigeria. Therefore, we suggest that effort to grow the Nigeria economy should be intensified with the intent of creating jobs for millions of the poor rural dwellers while the gap between the financially excluded and reached can further be bridge by the innovation of internet banking, prepaid cards, debit/credit cards and mobile money.

 

Accepted:  09/07/2020

Published: 15/07/2020

 

*Corresponding Author

Iwedi Marshal

E-mail: iwedimarshal@ yahoo.com

 

 

Keywords:

Financial Inclusion; Poverty; Economic Development; Nigeria

 

 

 

Return to Content       View [Full Article - PDF]  

[Full Article - HTML]              [Full Article - EPUB]


 

 

REFERENCES

 

Achugamonu, B.U, Taiwo, J.N Ikpefan O.A, Olurinola, I.O, &Okorie, U.E (2016). Agent Banking and Financial Inclusion: The Nigerian Experience.Proceedings of the 28th Proceedings of the 28th International Business Information Management Association conference. Sevilla Spain.

 

Central Bank of Nigeria – National Financial Inclusion Strategy (2012), Summary Report on Financial Inclusion in Nigeria. Abuja, 20th January, 2012. Available from: http://www.cenbank.org/ Out/2012/publications/reports/dfd/CBN-Summary%20Report%20 of-Financial%20Inclusion%20in%20Nigeria-final.pdf.

 

Central Bank of Nigeria.(2012). National Financial Inclusion Strategy.afi-global.org. Abuja

 

Central Bank of Nigeria.(2018). 2017 annual report on national financial inclusion strategy implementation.Financial inclusion secretariat Central Bank of Nigeria.https://www.cbn.gov.ng/Out/2018/CCD/FINANCIAL%20INCLUSION.PDF.

 

Demirgüç-Kunt, A., &Klapper, L. (2013).Measuring financial inclusion: Explaining variation in use of financial services across & within countries. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2013(1), 279-340.

 

Enhancing Financial Innovation & Access (EFInA). 2018. Key Findings: EFInA Access to FinancialServices in Nigeria 2018 Survey. EFInA: Lagos.

 

Hannig, A. & Jansen, S. (2010), ―Financial inclusion & financial stability: current policy issues‖, ADBI, Working Paper No 259.

 

Karlan, D. & J. Morduch (2009). Access to Finance.‖ In D. Rodrik& M, Rosenzweig, eds. Handbook of Development Economics, Volume 5. Amsterdam: Elsevier. 4704-4784

 

Martinez M (2011) The political economy of increased financial access. Master Thesis Submitted to Georgetown University, USA.

 

Mas, I., & Kumar, K. (2008). Banking on mobiles: why, how, for whom?.CGAP Focus note, (48).

 

Okoye, L.U. Adetiloye, K.A., Erin, O, &Modebe, N.J. (2017). Financial inclusion as a strategy for enhanced economic growth and development. Journal of Internet Banking and Commerce, 22(S8), 2-14.

 

Radcliffe, D. & R. Voorhies, (2012) “A Digital Pathway to Financial Inclusion,” Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation Policy Paper, available at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id =2186926.

 

Shrier, D Canale, G &Pentland, A (2016) Mobile money and payments: technology trends” http://resources.getsmarter.ac/other/mobile-money-payments-technology-trends-an-mit-white-paper.

 

World Bank. (2014). Digital finance: Empowering the poor via new technologies, April 10. Available at: http://www.worldbank.org/en/news/feature/2014/04/10/digital-finance-empowering-poor-new-technologies.


 

 

Cite this Article: Iwedi, M (2020). Financial Inclusion in Nigeria: An Evaluation of the Progress, Challenges and Trend. Greener Journal of Economics and Accountancy, 8(1):01-5,

 


Call for Papers

Call for Scholarly Articles


Authors from around the world are invited to send scholary articles that suits the scope of this journal. The journal is currently open to submissions and will process and publish articles monthly in one yearly issue.


The journal is centered on quality and goes about its processes in a very timely fashion. Seasoned editors/reviewers will be consulted to review each article(s), profer quality evaluations and polish the articles with expertise before publication.


Simply send your article(s) as an e-mail attachment to manuscripts@gjournals.org or manuscripts.igj@gmail.com.


Ad.


Search

Login Form

Other Journals


Sponsored