Can Financial Inclusion and Financial Stability Go Hand in Hand?
Can Financial Inclusion and Financial Stability Go Hand in Hand?
Can Financial Inclusion and Financial Stability Go Hand in Hand?
ABSTRACT
This study addresses the relation between financial inclusion and financial sta-
bility. In order to do so, we review studies on the diverse possible links between
these two financial phenomena for developing countries. Although some results
are still preliminary, from the reviewed studies we can draw some conclusions.
First, risk may rise from rapid credit growth associated with new financial
inclusion institutions and instruments, and from unregulated parts of the finan-
cial system. However, broader access to deposits that leads to a more diversi-
fied base of deposits, could improve significantly the resilience of the overall
financial system and thus financial stability. A further conclusion is that it is
important to specify what type of state intervention or regulation is necessary in
the particular case of financial inclusion. The application of standards and other
measures that guarantee financial stability might prove to be a setback to inclu-
sion processes.
1. INTRODUCTION
In this paper we discuss the extent to which the growing importance of insti-
tutions and instruments that promote financial inclusion could be considered
a threat to the financial stability of developing economies. Certain actors and
organisations responsible for financial stability have recently begun to stress
that the links between stability and financial inclusion might be more complex
and less well understood than previously thought.
The Financial Stability Board (FSB), together with the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB), published a report on finan-
cial stability which covered topics of particular interest for emerging
economies (FSB, IMF and WB 2011). The report identifies the growing prolif-
eration and development of financial institutions, which lend to and take
deposits from people and small and medium enterprises (SMEs) on a very
small scale. It underlines how these institutions’ very rapid growth and ever-
closer connection with the rest of the financial system (in particular banks),
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2. FINANCIAL INCLUSION
Definitions and indicators for financial inclusion that are globally accepted
have been provided by some of the key international bodies responsible (AFI
2011; GPFI and CGAP 2011; García et al 2013). We can extrapolate from these
definitions the multidimensional nature of financial inclusion, where their
basic elements are access and use and, more recently, quality (Roa 2015).
The lack of access has traditionally been defined as a type of limitation
or observable barrier resulting from the frictions associated with the financial
sector: information and transaction costs (Honohan 2004; Beck and De la
Torre 2007). Concretely, information frictions give rise to barriers such as
requirements of collateral, documentation, or high tariffs that a large part of
the population cannot meet. Alternatively, high transaction costs (especially in
remote rural areas) make opening a bank branch or financial services point
unprofitable. In developing or rural economies, in particular, the segmentation
of the market, the dispersion of producers and the lack or bad condition of
road networks contribute to very high transaction costs.
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the quality and efficacy of access to and use of financial services (CGAP and
WB 2010; AFI 2011). Although concrete indicators still do not exist, all agree
that the referential framework to measure this dimension ought to take into
account issues such as the diversity and adaptability to clients of the product,
the variety of and alternatives to financial services, appropriate regulation and
supervision of financial services and products, as well as policies related to
consumer protection and financial education.
3. FINANCIAL STABILITY
Since the 2007 global financial crisis the importance of maintaining financial
stability has attracted the attention of academics, policymakers, and practi-
tioners. The Financial Stability Board (FSB 2011) indicates that financial
authorities need to focus their attention on a credit intermediation system that
includes entities and activities outside the banking system, which can pose a
systemic risk. Additionally, the financial crisis alerted policymakers to the
need for a macroprudential dimension to financial surveillance and regulation.
In particular, the approach to the development of these measures of financial
system stability has changed over the years, as the locus of concern moved
from microprudential to macroprudential dimensions of financial stability.
From the analysis of early warning indicators to monitor the state of the bank-
ing system, particularly the risk of default of individual institutions, the focus
has shifted to a broader system-wide assessment of risks to the financial mar-
kets, institutions and infrastructure: systemic financial risk (FSB, IMF and
BIS 2009). Consequently, a key goal of the policy reforms has been to reduce
the risks associated with systemically important financial institutions whose
disorderly failure, because of their size, complexity, and systemic intercon-
nectedness, would cause significant disruption to the wider financial system
and economic activity.
For the design of interventions, the general consensus is that defining
financial stability is crucial. However, financial stability is considerably more
difficult to define and measure than other traditional policy goals, such as price
stability, given the interdependence and the complex interactions of different
elements of the financial system between themselves and with the real econo-
my. Notwithstanding, different research and policy studies, some common ele-
ments are derived (Ponce and Tubio 2010; Alawode and Al Sadek 2008).
It is very common to relate financial stability with the main functions of
the financial system — allocate savings to more productive investments and the
provision of a payment system — and with the resilience of financial system to
different shocks. For example, Padoa-Schioppa (2002 p 20) contends that
‘…financial stability is a condition where the financial system is able to with-
stand shocks without giving way to cumulative processes, which impair the
allocation of savings to investment opportunities and the processing of pay-
ments in the economy’. Mishkin (1999 p 7) states that ‘financial instability
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occurs when shocks to the financial system interfere with information flow so
that the financial system can no longer do its job of channeling funds to those
with productive investment opportunities’.
As many central banks established financial stability departments and
began publishing Financial Stability Reports, they have also adopted these the-
oretical definitions in order to provide some guidance to their objective of safe-
guarding financial stability (Alawode and Al Sadek 2008). Overall, definitions
of financial stability emphasise the resilience to shocks and continued ability
to perform effectively the basic functions of intermediation savings and invest-
ments in the real economy. Indeed, the inability to absorb shocks seems to be
crucial factor, because it can lead to downward spiral whereby they are prop-
agated through the system and become self-reinforcing, leading to a general
financial crisis and disruption of the financial intermediation mechanism (sys-
temic risks).
The global Standard-Setting Bodies (SSBs), together with the Financial
Stability Board (FSB), determine a combination of principles, practices and
guidelines — called standards — which are internationally-accepted as a
means of promoting the functioning of the domestic financial system and inter-
national financial stability. The regulatory frameworks seek to strengthen the
resilience of the banking system through prudential measures that will
enhance the quality of capital; increase the level of capital; promote the build-
up of capital buffers to mitigate pro-cyclicality; supplement the risk-based cap-
ital requirements with a leverage ratio; and introduce a set of global liquidity
standards.
There is as yet no widely-accepted set of measurable indicators of finan-
cial stability that can be monitored and assessed over time; in general, it is
measured by different indicators. In part, this reflects the multifaceted nature
of financial stability, as it relates to both the stability and resilience of financial
institutions, and to the smooth functioning of financial markets and settlement
systems over time. However, it also reflects the relatively young age of the dis-
cipline of assessing financial stability.
Nevertheless, to assess the stability of the financial system and the
banking sector, policymakers use different approaches, including the calcula-
tion of financial soundness indicators, stress testing, development of the finan-
cial or banking sector through financial deepening, capital adequacy, asset
quality, and management soundness among others. The set of Financial
Soundness Indicators2 (FSIs) developed by the IMF is an example of such indi-
cators. The World Bank’s Development Indicators database3 (GFDD) also
includes financial stability indicators.
3. LITERATURE REVIEW
Studies on the diverse possible links between financial stability and inclusion
are new and on the whole realised by those institutions, international bodies,
policy makers, regulators or supervisors responsible for safeguarding financial
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inclusion and/or stability. Until very recently, the majority of the documents
comprised case studies from countries or regions, gathered in working docu-
ments or speeches, which do not explore nor demonstrate empirically the pro-
posed links. They also neglect to apply a concrete conceptual framework. The
different authors emphasise the need for solid and rigorous theoretical and
empirical analysis into these links.
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and regulatory prudential tools that have already been developed, in particu-
lar for new financial instruments such as mobile banking or agent banking.
They affirm, moreover, that the regulation and supervision of financial servic-
es for these segments of the population are better understood than in other
segments of the market. Alongside prudential measures, they underline the
importance of the development of more effective policies for consumer protec-
tion and financial education programs.
Secondly, there is a series of documents - the product of conferences
and projects organised among the principal bodies responsible for financial
inclusion and stability - that sketch a series of general guidelines, related with
regulation and supervision issues, to ensure that inclusion and stability go
hand in hand.
One of the main bodies responsible at the international level for finan-
cial inclusion, the Alliance for Financial Inclusion (AFI), has recently worked
with global SSBs on various projects that seek to analyse the various connec-
tions between financial stability and inclusion. Their first joint project was the
elaboration of a white paper (GPFI and CGAP 2011), in which are suggested
different ways that SSBs could integrate financial inclusion with the estab-
lished standards and guidelines for ensuring financial stability. In order to
make this happen, the authors highlight the need for the following to be taken
into account: i) the evaluation of the risks of financial exclusion; ii) the analy-
sis of the nature of the new risks implied by financial inclusion, as well as the
country context; and iii) an analysis of the importance of the principle of pro-
portionality in regulation: the balance of the risks and benefits in the face of the
costs of regulation and supervision of different financial inclusion instruments
and institutions.
The second joint project was the preparation of five country case stud-
ies in order to explore the application of SSBs’ standards and guidance at the
country level in countries at the forefront of pursuing a financial inclusion pol-
icy agenda (Brazil, Kenya, Mexico, the Philippines, and South Africa).
The third joint project undertaken by GPFI and the SSBs has been the organ-
isation of two annual conferences on the compatibility of financial inclusion
policies and the application of standards and other measures that guarantee
financial stability. Under the title 'Promoting Financial Inclusion through
Proportionate Standards and Guidance', the first conference discussed the
changes which SSBs are adapting to in their efforts to expand financial inclu-
sion without endangering stability (GPFI and BIS 2012).
During the first conference, the main links between financial stability
and inclusion were explained. A more inclusive financial sector: i) would have
a more diversified and stable retail deposit base; ii) would probably have
greater political legitimacy, decreasing political risk and social instability
(which could lead to financial instability); and, iii) would have the potential to
increase economic stability, an essential component of financial stability. The
following statements were also made on how stability affects financial inclu-
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not impact on institutions that have traditionally been mechanisms for finan-
cial inclusion. All the same, the author indicates that setbacks might arise for
inclusion processes, as measures are adopted addressing financial intermedi-
ation, such as an increase in capital requirements or taxes on banks or finan-
cial transactions.
Hawkins (2006) highlights the distinct regulatory interventions through
which central banks can promote financial stability and inclusion: i) through
tiered banking; ii) by stimulating competition in the banking system; ii) by
establishing principles of transparency for payment systems as well as access
and procedure standards, as much for banks as for non-bank institutions; iii)
by identifying the appropriate base for the financing of deposit insurance and
appropriate coverage limits, as well as stimulating the strength of each
insured institution; and iv) by guaranteeing appropriate supervision of foreign
banks.
More recently, Mehrotra and Yetman (2015) discuss the possible
impacts of financial inclusion on both the effectiveness of monetary policy and
financial stability, and the implications for central banks. Regarding monetary
policy, the authors suggest that increasing financial inclusion facilities
smooth consumption, as households have easier access to saving and bor-
rowing products. As a result, output volatility is no longer as costly. This may
facilitate a central bank's efforts to maintain price stability. Further, growing
financial inclusion is likely to increase the relevance of interest rates in mon-
etary transmission, as a result of an increase in the proportion of economic
activity that depends on interest rates. This tends to improve the effectiveness
of monetary policy.
Concerning financial stability, based on different empirical studies that
we shall discuss in the next section, there are various ways in which increased
financial inclusion could be beneficial for financial stability. However, the ben-
efits depend on the nature of the improved financial access. Specifically,
excessive credit growth could lead to higher risk in an unregulated financial
system.
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two phenomena, the empirical evidence still does not seem to confirm such a
relationship. Statistically speaking, when measured in terms of deposit
account penetration, financial inclusion has neither a positive nor a negative
correlation with the FAS and the GFDD. The authors suggest that the lack of
a positive correlation may be caused in part by a lack of solid data, but it may
also mean that the relationship between financial inclusion and financial sta-
bility is not straightforward. Ardic et al (2013 p 35), conclude by suggesting a
few recommendations for further empirical research on the financial inclusion
and financial stability links. They advise: ‘a) Ascertaining the existence or
nonexistence of systemic risk factors stemming from greater financial access;
b) better understanding the qualitative nature of access, with a focus on what
constitutes responsible access. For example, it makes sense that greater
financial protection, a key element of responsible finance, leads to less over-
indebtedness overall; and c) understanding both how the regulatory environ-
ment determines how access is managed, while ensuring financial stability,
and where a proportionate regulatory and supervisory framework can play a
role in fostering the linkage is needed.’
A deep analysis of FAS data reveals some evidence for the relationship
between inclusion and financial stability. In particular the Global Financial
Development Report (WB 2012) shows that financial access and financial sta-
bility correlate better in low-income and lower-middle income countries, where
access problems are more severe. Specifically, there are negative and statisti-
cally significant correlations between financial access (measured by number of
loan accounts per 1,000 adults) and two other indicators of stability: bank
nonperforming loans/loans and risk premiums.
On the other hand, there is also a negative correlation with bank capi-
tal/assets, meaning higher loan penetration in markets with lower capitalised
banks. This may be explained by the fact that that some countries with high
incomes and high levels of access suffer from a series of linked factors that
entail greater instability, such as smaller capital requirements or fewer per-
sonal incentives to monitor risk. On the other hand, banks in low-income
countries have higher capital-to-assets ratios (whether to meet regulatory
requirements or simple prudence), given regulatory requirements and less
sophisticated capital structures. This corresponds also to the fact that lower-
and lower-middle-income countries in fact responded more proactively than
high-income countries to adopt more prudent regulatory frameworks in
response to the financial crisis (Cihák et al 2012). In addition, the data show
that countries with more competitive banking sectors have higher deposit pen-
etration and greater stability.
Han and Melecky (2013) examine the link between broader access to
bank deposits prior to the 2008 crisis and the dynamics of bank deposit
growth during the crisis, while controlling for relevant covariates. Employing
proxies for access to deposits and the use of bank deposits, the authors find
that greater access to bank deposits can make the deposit funding base of
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economy during the boom of the 1990s declined even more severely than the
national economy, and microfinance had scarcely exercised any countercycli-
cal influence in the aggregate. Marconi and Mosley (2006) state that the effect
of microfinance on the aggregate is due, in part, to institutional design. In par-
ticular, those organisations which provided savings, training and quasi-insur-
ance services bounded the trend of rising default rates and falling lending
through the crisis and did particularly well, whereas the new variety of con-
sumer-credit microfinance organisations did particularly poorly. In line with
IMF and WB studies, this experience suggests that it may be appropriate to
call into question the ‘credit-only’ model of microfinance.
4. REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
The majority of the studies reviewed here suggest that greater financial inclu-
sion, understood in terms of greater access to and use of formal financial
intermediaries, reduces financial instability through: i) a more diversified and
stable retail deposit base, ii) more efficient intermediation of resources, and iii)
enhanced household capacity to manage vulnerabilities and shocks. Similarly,
the principal theoretical and operative definitions of financial stability posit
the existence of financial institutions that develop effective intermediation of
resources and diversification of risk, as an essential element in guaranteeing
financial stability. In addition, some studies affirm that greater access to for-
mal financial markets would reduce the risks associated with participation in
the informal financial sector.
Nonetheless, the work of De la Torre et al (2012) explains how the
process of reducing agency frictions and collective frictions that increase
access to and use of financial markets, can give rise to problems of financial
instability. The authors call this the dark side of financial development.
Eliminating agency frictions and transaction costs promotes stability and
access to financial markets. But there are other frictions, related to financial
activity, in which a greater number of agents participate, that can endanger
stability. Concretely, the authors indicate that positive externalities related to
a greater participation in the market in good times, can become failures of co-
ordination, parasitism or negative externalities in bad times. Moreover, greater
participation can also give rise to problems of collective cognition which
endanger financial stability (Akerloff and Schiller 2009). The authors conclude
that regulation can be an antidote to the instability and systemic risk that
underlie financial development.
In fact, according to the studies reviewed, the existence of i) adequate
regulation and supervision of new financial inclusion instruments and insti-
tutions, ii) effective financial consumer protection policies, and iii) pro-
grammes of financial education, are key in ensuring that greater access and
use do not endanger financial stability. These measures are related to those
taken after the recent financial crisis in developed countries, especially those
of regulation and supervision. As was mentioned above, after the crisis, finan-
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cial authorities needed to focus their attention on the regulation and supervi-
sion of a credit intermediation system that includes entities and activities out-
side the banking system that can pose a systemic risk.
Nevertheless, the risks and frictions associated with financial inclusion
could be different to and less pronounced than those associated with financial
development in its most advanced stages (especially some sophisticated cred-
it intermediation activities), as are the measures to be applied. Therefore, it is
important to specify which are the concrete risks associated with financial
inclusion, as well as the type of state intervention or regulation needed.
In this sense, Global Standard Setting Bodies are recently recognising
developing country realities. For example, the Basel Committee for Banking
Supervision and the Financial Action Task Force have a membership primarily
comprised of advanced economies, but is now working with developing and
emerging country policymakers. Historically, financial risks were believed to
originate from developing and emerging countries with less rigid regulations. As
a result, rules and standards prescribed by advanced economies tended to over-
look developing country perspectives. But now, as innovative financial inclusion
efforts develop and more financial service providers and products become avail-
able, SSBs have started to engage with financial inclusion regulators and advo-
cates. The GPFI (2011) has also elaborated case studies on five countries (Brazil,
Kenya, Mexico, the Philippines and South Africa), analysing their experience in
implementing international financial standards and their interaction with finan-
cial inclusion policies. A survey was prepared for the latter and answered by the
most important regulatory authorities in each country.
Meanwhile, the Maya declaration commits members of the AFI4 —
mainly central banks and regulators — to four actions, including implement-
ing a framework based on the principle of proportionality for regulation
strengthening the linkages between inclusion and financial stability. Central
banks are indeed increasingly pursuing financial inclusion because of its con-
tribution to financial stability (Hannig 2013, 2014). Regulators hope that
expanding financial access will also provide greater stability to the overall
financial system, as the market becomes larger and more diverse. But they
also show that greater financial access may increase financial risks if it results
from rapid credit growth or the expansion of relatively unregulated parts of the
financial system. It is important to distinguish between a widening pool of bor-
rowers and an unsustainable lending boom. Also, financial inclusion may
reflect unregulated parts of the financial sector. Central banks and
Superintendencies can contribute to favourable rules and regulations encour-
aging the creation of specialised providers or enabling existing ones to trans-
form into regulated institutions.
From the studies reviewed, we can extrapolate those characteristics of
the nature of financial inclusion that could endanger stability, as well as the reg-
ulation policies necessary to reduce those risks. First, some studies assert that
it is easier to understand individual risks and prudential regulations of financial
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kets and services, but insufficient ex-ante regulation can risk the emergence of
instabilities. The author suggests a balancing act: consistent with regulation by
function and risk-based, the right mix depends on the service provided.
Finally, with respect to demand-side policies, it should be noted that
several of the studies reviewed affirm that the behaviour of low-income clients
or small businesses is more solid during financial crises. Programmes for
financial education and financial consumer protection aimed at this public
should focus in their early stages on increasing trust in and understanding of
formal financial intermediaries, as well as different products. Moreover, finan-
cial inclusion is bringing in people who have never dealt with a financial insti-
tution, for whom some of the contracts written with densely worded legal jar-
gon are unfamiliar. In this scenario, consumer protections and financial edu-
cation programmes are essential.
5. CONCLUSIONS
Financial inclusion is increasingly becoming a priority for policymakers
because of its possible effect on economic growth, inequality and stability.
Understanding the effects of financial inclusion on these macroeconomic vari-
ables is essential to develop appropriate financial inclusion interventions.
In this study we have discussed the nexus between financial inclusion
and stability from a comprehensive literature review. The analyses of the rela-
tionships continue to be works in progress, and more empirical studies to
quantify and collect data for factors that affect these relationships are needed.
Although some results are still inconclusive and preliminary, from the
reviewed studies we can draw some conclusions. First, risk may rise from
rapid credit growth associated with new financial inclusion institutions and
instruments, and from unregulated parts of the financial system. On the other
hand, broader access to deposits that lead to a more diversified base of
deposits could significantly improve the resilience of the overall financial sys-
tem and thus financial stability.
Second, the measures that should accompany greater access and use
in order to prevent them from endangering stability, are related to those that
were outlined after the crisis for the most advanced stages of financial devel-
opment: prudential regulations, financial consumer protection policies and
financial education. Nevertheless, the studies affirm that the risks and fric-
tions associated with financial inclusion are different to and less pronounced
than those associated with financial development in its most advanced stages.
The application of standards and other measures that guarantee financial sta-
bility might prove to be a setback to the inclusion processes. In this regard, it
is important to specify what type of state intervention or regulation is neces-
sary in the particular case of financial inclusion, rather than automatically
applying measures derived from the financial crisis. For example, taking into
account the principle of proportionality, delegated supervision seems to be the
most appropriate alternative, as in the case of federations and confederations
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ENDNOTES
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