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ABSTRACT
Access to financial services is crucial for economic activities and reduces
poverty irrespective of gender and location. However, the analyses of financial
inclusion, financial inclusion inequality and financial literacy on poverty have
been neglected. This thesis examines the effects of financial inclusion,
financial literacy and financial inclusion inequality on poverty in Ghana.
Specifically, the study seeks to determine variations in financial inclusion
between males and females, in urban and rural areas and assess whether these
gaps have increased over time. Again, the study evaluates the combined and
relative effects of financial inclusion and financial literacy on household
poverty in Ghana. Finally, the study investigates the effect of financial
inclusion inequality on poverty at the district level. The study adopts the
counterfactual decomposition, Ordinary Least Square (OLS), Instrumental
Variable (IV), and ordered logit estimation techniques. Financial inclusion
inequality is calculated using the Generalized Entropy class of inequality
measures with data from the Financial Inclusion Insight National survey
(2015) and Ghana Living Standard Survey Rounds 6 and 7 (2013/14 and
2016/17). The study finds the existence of financial inclusion gaps with the
gender gap reducing by 6.0 percent between 2013 and 2017 and conversely
increasing by 42.0 percent between urban and rural areas over the same
period. Again, the study finds that financial inclusion and financial literacy
reduce multidimensional poverty by 15.4 and 0.9 percent respectively.
However, the combined effect reduces multidimensional poverty by 18.9
percent. Finally, the study shows that a one percent increase in financial
inclusion inequality presents a 17.9 percent likelihood for a household head to
be poor. The study recommends that the Bank of Ghana should revise the
capital requirement for financial institutions downwards to encourage financial
institutions to operate in rural areas. Also, the Ministry of Communication and
Digitalisation should review the existing national telecommunication policy to
improve coverage in rural areas. Again, the Management of the District
Assembly should liaise with the National Commission for Civic Education to
promote financial inclusion at the district level. |
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