(World Bank, Washington, DC, 2023-08-28)
Independent Evaluation Group
This evaluation explores how and with
what effect the World Bank Group has supported financial
inclusion for the microenterprises, poor households, women,
and other excluded groups. Financial inclusion is defined as
the use of financial services by individuals and firms. It
encompasses financial access—owning an account—and the use
of financial services. There has been an impressive growth
in account ownership globally, from 55% of adults in 2014 to
71% in 2021, although usage is more limited as some accounts
are inactive. Critically, both financial access and the use
of financial services remain major challenges for
microenterprises, poor households, women, and other excluded
groups. The objective of the evaluation is to assess whether
the Bank Group has been doing the right things and whether
it has been doing things right on financial inclusion. The
evaluation captures lessons from the World Bank’s experience
supporting financial inclusion for microenterprises, poor
households, women, and other excluded groups and updates a
2015 financial inclusion evaluation. The evaluation includes
a retrospective look at the drive for universal financial
access and examines progress and challenges in women’s
access to financial services. The evaluation also assesses
the Bank Group’s support for digital financial services as
vehicles for financial inclusion. Finally, the report
examines the World Bank’s response to COVID-19 as it relates
to financial inclusion. The evaluation proposes three
recommendations: (i) The World Bank and IFC should further
encourage account use by underserved groups, including women
and rural poor people, and emphasize this more in their
strategies and projects. (ii) The World Bank and IFC should
design and implement more comprehensive approaches that
address constraints in the enabling environment for DFS to
reach underserved and excluded groups. (iii) To enhance
learning on what works to increase the beneficial use of
financial services at the MPWEG, the World Bank and IFC
should collect outcome data across different underserved and
excluded groups, initially on a pilot basis.