Synopses & Reviews
The book is devoted to a subject which deserves growing attention from policy makers, financial operators and academics. It is the issue of unbanking or underbanking in developed countries. With respect to this, the goal of the authors has been to devote more efforts to understanding the problem of financial exclusion in order to offer to low-moderate-income people new opportunities of accessing financial services (banking, credit and investment services).
Synopsis
This book is devoted to an issue that is the subject of growing interest amongst policy makers, financial providers and academics. That issue is the problem of unbanking or underbanking in developed countries. The issue has arisen because, faced with an ever more sophisticated and efficient financial system, an increasing number of people have found themselves in danger of being excluded from it. The goal of the papers that follow is to draw attention, both through a theoretical framework and through field study, to the need for banks, financial institutions, public authorities and non profit associations to increase their efforts to understand the process of financial exclusion, so that they can develop approaches to help people on low to moderate incomes to gain access to the whole range of financial services, from payment to savings, and from loans to investment. Some farsighted banks and financial institutions have already developed strategies, and introduced new products and services, to promote financial inclusion in these untapped markets. The research group is international and multi-disciplinary. The authors are grateful to the Italian Ministry for University Research (MIUR) for financial assistance provided under the PRIN 2003 programme. The volume has been produced thanks to support from the University of Valle d Aosta Universite de la Vallee d Aoste (Italy), which has an leading reputation for encouraging research on financial innovation aimed at marginalised groups."
Table of Contents
Introduction.- Part I: Access to Banking Account and Payment Services.- Access to Credit: the Difficulties of Households.- Access to Investments and Asset Building for Low Income People.- Part II: What Are the Specific Economic Gains from Improved Financial Inclusion? A Tentative Methodology for Estimating These Gains.- From Financial Exclusion to Overindebtness: the Paradox of Difficulties of Low Income People.- The Role of Savings Banks in Germany in Preventing Financial Exclusion.- Economic Growth and Financial Inclusion: The Case of Poland.- Italian Banks' Approach Towards Low-Income Consumers and Microenterprises: Is There a Bias Against Some Segments of Customers.- Banking the Poor: Policies to Bring Low- and Moderate-Income Households in the United States into the Financial Mainstream.- Migrants and Remittances.- Conclusions.