Mary Ellen Iskenderian, President and CEO of Women’s World Banking, presents her keynote address for the Central Bank of the Future Conference. Learn more here.
Transcript:
So welcome back everybody and
welcome to our new guests we think
resolved all of our technical difficulties
were happy to have you back for
the University of Michigan central bank
of the Future Conference which is hosted
here at the University of Michigan by
the Center on finance law and policy for
those of you who are watching on line are
new to the audience I'm Michael Barr on
the faculty director of the Center on
finance on policy as well as the Joan and
Sanford while dean of the Gerald r.
Ford School of Public Policy and good
afternoon everyone I'm Adrian Harris I'm
a senior research fellow at the center as
well as a professor of the practice at
the Ford School of Public Policy we're
thrilled to have so many distinguished
speakers here today looting governors
deputy governors of central banks and
former governors including will have with
us tomorrow Governor from the rigs bank
in Sweden Deputy Governor Timothy lane
he's been with us today with us tomorrow
from the Bank of Canada deputy governor
Howard from the central bank of Egypt.
Governor I'm odd from the Central Bank
of Nigeria and former governor and
from the central bank of Kenya we have an
outstanding lineup of speakers joining us
over the next couple of days policymakers
fin tect executives journalists academics
and leaders from various disciplines and
many stakeholders in the audience today
from a number of organizations
including the World Bank the i.m.f.
see gap financial help network and
others as many of you
know this is a small part of a larger
research project that Adrian and
I are conducting in partnership with
the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
that is looking to eliminate the
technology business and policy innovations
that can be used to improve financial
inclusion around the world.
Technology has already dramatically
changed financial services whether these
changes lead to more affordable
useful services that benefit low and
moderate income people or those who live
in rural areas or lack permanent address
or don't have a dedication whether
leads to fewer services or
less affordable options that's a result of
the decisions they will be making now and
many decades into the future the experts
who will be presenting over the next few
days and who are asking questions from
the audience come from lots of different
backgrounds but we're all united in
the goal of expanding access to financial
inclusion and working to make
a financial system that works for
everyone we hope you'll leave this
conference with a different outlook and
the number of new ideas that will spur
further discussion and as part of that we
hope this conference will inspire you
to submit a proposal to present next
year's conference so part of what you'll
find in your packets are a call for
papers including deadlines and
other logistics for
policy proposals research ideas
technology proposals that we can present
next year there's also a few other items
in your registration packet that I'd
like to call your attention to 1st
the University of Michigan's Fin Tech
collaborative where he
has issued a request for
proposals to fund Internet disciplinary
research papers courses and
educational initiatives around
the university with an emphasis on block
change applications 2nd this Friday
the 4th is the deadline for the u.n.
students to register for
the $21000.00 rockets in tech challenge
it's a pitch pitch competition
where students can win cash for
developing Finn attack hashcash students.
For developing a fin tech solution
to modern business problems with
the potential for social impact.
3rd also finding your packet for
a flyer for
October 18th you have an innovation
in action is hosting a financial
inclusion design Jam were student
teams will be challenged to take
the best components of bank credit
union and other lending products and
create a universally easy and affordable
short term loan product in just 4 hours
I want to go over a few additional details
for the next couple of days you're in
Palmer Commons in the Great Lakes room
the hole you walk through is the atrium
we're hearing obviously in just a moment
from Mary Ellen Iskenderian and following
her address will be holding an opening
reception in the atrium that is open to
everyone tomorrow morning will spend most
of the day in the auditorium called Forum
hall Jen tester from the financial health
and health network will get us started and
we'll have a full day of 4 different
panels about Central Bank approaches to
financial inclusion at the end of each
keynote or panel conversation if there's
time to do so we're going to be opening
the floor to questions look out for
the mike runners and
please do use the mics because we'll be
both video recording and live streaming
this conference as we are now and
the people watching online want to hear
to hello to our online viewers already
a Before we get to introductions of our
keynote speaker we'd like to think number
of people who making this event
possible are collaborators in this
larger eventual venture Michael weekend
Chris Kolob be a monster not Paul and
Paul will sing of the bell and
Melinda Gates Foundation
co-sponsors the Ford School of Public
Policy and the Ross schools business plus
impact our student group co-sponsors
domestic policy Corps in Michigan
the Fin Tech and of course all of you
our speakers and participants today.
We'd also like to thank the c.f.l.
staff Christy there and.
You've all had great interactions with and
helping us all get here and
arrive safely and in one piece Kelly Brown
Laura Lee Chris Myers Eric Van Deventer
of the Ford school
Haley Philips cat Johnson.
The impact studio and business plus impact
and all of the Center on financial and
policies are A's who you've seen
throughout the conference and
have been helping you along your journey
as well but especially our designers j.
Campbell Lauer and
Elizabeth fellow the burger and
our core research team Ashton Jennifer
Cali Cole Lucas Carr and Michael.
And now let me begin
our formal part of the day by introducing
our wonderful keynote speaker for
the afternoon Mary Ellen Iskenderian
Malian is President c.e.o.
woman's world banking a global nonprofit
devoted to giving more low income women
access to the financial tools and
resources they require to achieve security
and prosperity Mary Ellen joined
women's world banking in 2006 and
leads the woman's world banking
global team based in New York and
she also serves as a member of the
investment committee of its Impact Fund
prior to joining women's world banking
Mary Ellen worked for 17 years at
the International Finance Corporation
an arm of the World Bank before that
she worked for the investment bank
Lehman Brothers Mary Ellen is a member of
the Council on Foreign Relations is a
member of the women's form of New York in
the business and Sustainable Development
Commission shields an m.b.a.
from the Yale School of Management and
a Bachelor of Science and
International Economics from
Georgetown University School of
Foreign Service Please welcome me and
joining Mary Ellen thank.
Good afternoon it's really wonderful to be
with you today even though it's a little
rainy out there thank you to Michael and
Adrian for inviting me to address such
a distinguished audience of governor's
deputy governor as former governors and
other luminaries I don't like to
acknowledge the long hours hard work and
attention to detail that Christie bare
trace event is an action Smith have
invested in making this event a reality
we certainly are living in interesting
times aren't we globally we're seeing
big systemic shifts taking place
at an unbelievably rapid pace and
might have echoing a bit here.
Of Will we want to fix this or
should I keep going.
With it.
Sorry.
That's it that's any better well but
yeah great thank you for your patience.
Climate change is literally reshaping the
world around us political institutions and
systems are being challenged in
ways few of us ever anticipated
the way we live work and engage with each
other has been fundamentally changed
by the role of digital technology
over the past few decades
in many ways this is a particularly
volatile and uncertain time and
we all have a vested interest in
considering how we can shape the future
to hold a more stable resilient and
equitable world.
These ships have also resulted in
significant changes in the rules each of
you play as regulator standard setter and
policy maker you and
your central bank colleagues around the
globe have recognized that the oversight
of monetary policy payments and financial
institutions is not only critical for
the integrity and
stability of our financial systems but
is also essential in promoting
sustainable and inclusive growth and
the building of economies that work for
all in fact the very concept
of stability has been a reevaluated in the
last decade as regulators have questioned
just how stable a financial system
can actually be if 80 percent of
the of a country's financial transactions
take place outside that system
many of you have been in the forefront
of the drive toward greater financial
inclusion and your hard work has
really paid off in recent years we've
seen great strides in increasing financial
access throughout the developing world
according to the World Bank's Global Fund
x 1200000000 adults have obtained
a financial services account
since 2011 including 515000000
just since 24000 between 20142017
the share of adults who have
an account with a financial institution or
through a mobile money service rules
globally from 62 percent to 69
percent it's clear that the tremendous
advances in digital financial services
are behind a lot of that progress but
despite these advances there remain
some truly profound gaps in providing
access to even the most basic financial
services to those who need them most
many of you will be familiar with
another statistic from the 27900 acts
that 1700000000 people around
the world are still unbanked.
But what some of you may be less familiar
with and I'd argue we should all be paying
more to attention to is the fact that
the majority of these unbanked adults
nearly a 1000000000 of them are women
in looking at the conference agenda for
the next day and a half I see that you'll
be tackling many of the issues that
drive financial inclusion data
technology innovation and
these are the same things that are at
the heart of central banking I have
a request for you though as you
approach these discussions stop for
a moment and think about how each
of these issues might impact women
differently than they do men I am
absolutely certain that none of you would
ever explicitly design a discriminatory
regulation and that you
undoubtedly have no intention of the
imposing policies that affect women and
men differently but the truth of the
matter is that policy is not gender blind
closing the gender gap and financial
inclusion will require central bankers and
other policymakers who are sensitive
to the differences in men's and
women's experience with
the financial system and
in the broader economy and
as you begin to apply
this gender lens to various policy
approaches approaches there are a few
specific issues that can have
a disproportionate effect on women and
today I'd like to address
3 of them with you.
1st let's talk about numbers and
data central banks and financial
regulators are among the most data driven
institutions in the public sector but
if you really drill down into the data to
understand how women may be experiencing
financial services and broader
economic trends differently from men
as I'll discuss to promote policy
reforms that nurture a more inclusive
financial system and a more inclusive
the economy it would be important for
central banks and regulators to gather and
analyze gender desegregated data
2nd I'd like to explore some of
the links between financial stability
which is what many central banks tend to
emphasize through their regulations and
financial inclusion financial
institution regulation has traditionally
focused on promoting the safety and
soundness of individual firms so
that collectively the financial
system can remain stable but
is there room in regulation to consider
whether that financial system includes
everyone and especially women
research indicates that when women
have access to appropriate financial
tools health and education outcomes for
their family members especially
that of their children improves and
these at outcomes strike me as
the things that could be critical
to promoting sustainable and
inclusive growth in an economy which
is an increasingly relevant
goal among many central banks.
As my 3rd focus I'd like to discuss with
you some of the practical things that
central bankers regulators
standard setters and
other policy makers as well as industry
can do to ensure that women are able
to produce the proof to participate
in the formal financial system
he writes like to emphasize the specific
products and services that may best serve
the needs of women especially those in
developing countries already share I'll
share some of the results of women's
world banking's field research and
initiatives in this area with
regard to these 3 areas of focus
Sextus aggregated data regulation that
promotes stability and inclusion and
appropriate products that serve the needs
of women I'd like to challenge all of
you to bear these topics in mind during
our discussions here in Ann Arbor
as we consider what the central bank
of the future might look like and
how we might promote a more inclusive
financial system that can be a pillar
of a more inclusive and
sustainable economy so
1st and foremost let's begin with data
I want to stress the urgent need for
financial service providers to report and
for central banks and
regulators to collect gender
desegregated financial data
we can not move the needle on
financial inclusion let alone reach
that 1700000000 unbanked adults
without knowing who they are and
designing targeted strategies to
reach them thanks will never realize
the markets they're overlooking unless
they truly know who they're serving and
mobile network operators are no better
more than half of the telcos offering
mobile wallets today do not
desegregate their customer data.
And for the academics in the room you're
not off the hook either the basic
unit of academic research still
remains the household but
we know that not every member of that
household shares the same experience but
data collection can't be an end in itself
it must be used to further policy goals
let's take a look at the experience
of Chile the only country that has
consistently collected Sextus aggregated
financial decade of financial data for
more than a decade the quality and
depth of financial reporting and
the banking superintendent gets 100
percent compliance from the banks in Chile
on their entire desegregated data
set has allowed the government to
implement a range of policy
initiatives more effectively notably
their finding that women held
a higher percentage of housing loans
while men held more consumer loans and
that women were better we painters
greatly influenced the design of a highly
successful affordable housing scheme
Today women make up 62 percent of
that program's account holders and
women headed households have
been particular beneficiaries
we've been heartened in recent years by
the growing attention to the need for
more and better data including the i.m.f.
decision to require gender desegregated
data in its annual financial access survey
but we need to do more in a 2nd area for
your consideration relates directly
to your core mission as regulators
implementing sound regulatory atory
policy to ensure financial stability.
While the i.m.f.
has been cautious about endorsing
the macroeconomic benefits of financial
inclusion they have very clearly
stated that in developing countries
increased account ownership and saving
at a formal financial state institution
can significantly affect macroeconomic
stability particularly in
times of financial stress
the question I'd like to pose today
is whether there is room in regular retore
policy to consider not just financial and
economic stability but
also financial and economic inclusion in
this regard the benefits of bringing more
women into the formal financial system and
providing them access to the full
complement of financial services that they
need cannot be overstated from either
a financial or an economic perspective
literally mountains of research clearly
demonstrate that women spend a greater
percentage of the financial resources
under their control on education
health care of you Trisha in water and
sanitation really all the elements
of the sustainable development goals
to quote just one of the myriad
pieces of research on this topic
a study in China demonstrated that for
every 10 percent increase in financial
resources under a woman's control there
was a one percent increase in the rate of
survival of girls in the household and
significantly improved educational
outcomes for both boys and
girls in that household but
a similar 10 percent increase
in men's income resulted in
reduced rates of survival and
educational outcomes for girls and
no change in outcomes at all for boys.
These gains in health outcomes for
girls and in the educational outcomes for
both girls and boys show that
everyone wins when women control
over financial when women's control
over financial resources increases and
that's a wonderful outcome for
policy makers to pursue in general but
financial regulators and central bankers
in particular should consider these
outcomes as aligned with their focus
on financial and economic stability and
growth while more research is
necessary to quantify the impact of
these improved outcomes on economic
growth I do argue that healthier and
better educated people are probably
better positioned to participate
more fully in the economy than
people who are less healthy and
less educated over the next day and
a half you'll consider the ways in
which the central bank of the future
can promote more inclusive economies so
I'd ask you to also bear in mind
the long established positive links
between gender equality and
a country's per capita g.d.p.
its level of competitiveness
competitiveness its expenditures on school
enrollment and a range of other
human development indicators
likewise gender inequality is
associated with an increase in
income inequality as measured by
the Gini coefficient of up to 10
points if we accept that financial
inclusion can be a driver
of gender equality how can central bankers
and regulators improve women's access
to appropriate financial services and
which services are most important to women
this brings me to my 3rd area
of focus namely the products and
services that are most helpful
to women's financial inclusion.
Women's World Banking stealed work along
with the numerous research studies and
financial diary projects indicate that
savings products are the financial
services most frequently requested by low
income women digital savings in particular
present an opportunity to serve women's
financial needs in ways that both informal
and traditional formal financial services
have been unable to do financial services
delivered digitally can address
physical and emotional barriers for
women by offering better services at
lower cost digital savings accounts can
enable women to save as frequently as
possible even in very small amounts and
women clients already save
whether digital savings may or
may not enable them to
save more is unclear but
it can keep that woman's savings intact
directed towards concrete goals and
also gives her access to funds
in case of emergency perhaps
the best way to show you the importance
of savings to low income women is to let
the women tell you themselves we're going
to play a little video here thank you.
Technology can bring financial services
closer to women mobile phones and
banking even this can reduce
the risk the cost and
the distance of financial transactions for
women women face a number of barriers
in their access to financial services
they often have limited mobility in
the inability to leave their home in
Mother we mean the most celebrated We know
it's their sports ability as
the House could do some business and
do household watercraft at this
same time so we looked at that and
didn't do it to really have much to do or
out where our service does.
Quite a distance so you know to me and
to her you know we do total
the support that we have being
distributed to the customers
through what we call agents and
it is the agents out of a kit to do with.
The vicinity or.
People leave so it should be global
a very small distance to get to.
Hint and
to do by transaction it's actually a good
sign that I'm not going to get off.
And write them from.
My bank my coming up we.
Did not.
Have my bank when I signed I spent
thank you for 10 days because of my.
Physical today.
We think that's wrong.
To kill most of the mathematics
to do the job and
get to the next Mark we think and
technology is allowing
financial service providers to bring
their services directly to the ones
we're seeing great success with digital
tools in terms of in field account opening
doorstep service collection and we're
now starting to see partnerships where.
Existing informal savings groups are
partnering with banks to bring more women
into the formal financial system this
is a financial services represent
a huge opportunity to close the gender
gap and financial inclusion but
what happens to them are all they've
got for moving on money from you know
people that would have known by the when
you get it right if you are all gone wow.
It's getting cheaper it's clearly more
flexible and you to helps you track so
it gives you history so make a footprint
on the customer and helps you we find you
put up you know better than physical we
ever do we've seen a real shift at women's
world banking and then today almost all
of the projects at least the 10 have some
digital component because we really
believe that digital financial
services can be the key to closing
the gender gap in financial inclusion.
So I always love an excuse to watch
that video Yeah I think no one will hear
it for ever.
Partly to see deputy governor
of the Central Bank of Nigeria.
Who is here with us today advocating for
women's financial inclusion back
in her former life as a banker and
partly to see in walk that woman at
the end of the video with a particularly
electric smile I was fortunate
enough to meet a few years
ago in Lego's she runs a busy fruit stall
in an open market open air market there.
She tried to save for years so that she
could expand her business into a bigger
fruit stall but she struggled to have
enough money left at the end of the month
to pay her children's school fees which
was her absolute top priority let alone
invest in her business walk by told us
she needed a safe place to save that had
3 important characteristics it had to be
convenient because she didn't have time to
leave her business to go stand in line at
a bank branch that had to be confidential
because she didn't want her husband or her
neighbors knowing how much she'd saved or
what she was saving for and it had to
be more secure than say than carrying
cash from her shop to her home
to hide under her mattress.
But want also talked about a kind
of emotional distance from the bank
when she said that she didn't think a bank
would be for her since she doubted she
would be treated with dignity and
respect by the branch staff so
it was very fortuitous that Diamond Bank
the 4th largest corporate bank in Nigeria
at the time made the strategic decision
to move into the retail market and
saw the competitive opportunity in
expanding their presence to low income
clients through digital financial services
Diamond Bank came to women's world banking
to understand and
reach potential clients like walk.
So together we designed a savings
account called betta that offered
all of the benefits of confidentiality and
security that walked out was looking for
as well as convenience since as you heard
her say transactions could be managed
through her cell phone we also addressed
that emotional distance that she and
so many other women had told us about
by creating a group of account officers
called better friends that visited
diamond customers businesses
to help them open accounts and
provide some basic financial education.
Within 3 years time over 600000
better accounts were opened and
while the original expectation was that
the better friends would simply get
the customer started on their journey and
would be quickly replaced by cell phone
transactions the friends of soon emerged
as the preferred savings channel
mobilising close to 70 percent of
better account deposits this balance
of technology and the human touch
were essential to building trust and
reinforcing savings behavior this outcome
and the introduction of the better product
were made possible by regulators at the
Central Bank of Nigeria who realized that
women like Walker were being excluded from
the financial system by the cumbersome and
complex layers of no your customer or
k y c documentation
that had traditionally been necessary
to apply for a bank account.
Now make no mistake k y c and customer did
customer due diligence remain an important
part of the customer onboarding
process regulators and
bankers alike seek to prevent
abuse of the financial system and
deter the laundering of ill gotten gains
through financial accounts by requiring
customers to identify themselves
upon opening an account nevertheless
excessively stringent customer due
diligence requirements can exclude a woman
like me from the financial system simply
because she lacks the full suite of
identification documentation that
might otherwise be required given that
her account balances and transactions
are likely to remain low in value and
therefore most likely will not involve
money laundering activities regulators and
standard setting bodies have recognized
that institutions can risk adjust their k
y c requirements in such cases to reflect
the lower level of money laundering or
tech terrorist financing risk that's
intice a pated with such account holders.
Nigeria was one of the 1st markets to
introduce what is often called tiered k.y.
see requiring customers with lower value
balances like walk to provide only
basic information like their name address
gender telephone number and place and
date of birth to be able to use a bank
account that innovation of simplifying
the k y c requirements for lower risk
customers was a critical in Viet Nam and
for financial inclusion in Nigeria there
may be other standards where a risk
adjusted approach may make sense to help
expand access to financial services among
women the poor the unbanked and
other marginalized groups when drafting
new regulations or when evaluating
existing regulations central bankers and
regulators should consider whether
those rules may unnecessarily impede
access to financial services for women
where the risks to the financial system or
the broader economy may be quite low in
some areas that come immediately to mind
include the following There are important
changes that regulators can make to their
country's credit infrastructure namely
through the establishment of credit and
movable collateral registries
that can help to close
the $285000000000.00 credit gap for
women lead small businesses.
Of the $189.00 economies surveyed by the
World Bank's women business in the last
report 50 have neither
a public credit registry nor
a private credit bureau that serves more
than 5 percent of the adult population and
where registries do exist they typically
cover only large balance loans effectively
depriving women business owners of
the opportunity to build credit histories.
In addition the introduction of moveable
collateral registries can be a boon for
increasing women's access to capital
women are far less likely and
in some countries even legally
prevented from owning land or
built property and Maybelline financial
service providers to underwrite loans
using movable assets like machinery
equipment livestock crops inventory even
receivables as collateral can be a game
changer for women small business owners.
Regulators also must address the very
real pop problems of account dormancy
those impressive financial inclusion
gains I cited from the Global Fund x.
a few moments ago they simply
reflect account openings and
they define an active account
as one that merely has
a single transaction in the preceding
12 months that's hardly what any
of us would consider active
customer engagement in India for
example where we've seen huge progress
in the opening of new accounts
has over 55 percent of accounts
held by women as dormant
this high rate of dormancy speaks to the
need to create products that meet women's
needs and are relevant to their
lives women don't want and
are unlikely to engage with pink
products Rather they want products that
reflect the convenience confidentiality
and security that walk pup mentioned and
they also want financial service providers
to understand their need for flexibility
particularly if they are working in the
informal sector and have irregular incomes
and one last broad area where significant
work remains is in the area of identity
women who lack appropriate identity
documentation may be unable to open
accounts or even to purchase a sim
card for their mobile phone.
According to the World Bank's id for
development program 45 percent of
women lack identity in lower and
even middle income countries in some
countries live births of girls aren't
even registered while central banks are
generally not the authority that oversees
identity policy central bankers
could become powerful advocates for
expanding access to identity for
women because it is one of the biggest
impediments to their participation in the
financial system and Quansah currently in
the formal economy so I've now shared with
you the 3 areas where I'd really like
to challenge all of you to bring the a
gender lens to your discussions today and
tomorrow as you think about the risks and
opportunities that the central bank of
the future may face especially
when promoting financial inclusion
1st as some of the most data driven
public institutions and central banks and
financial regulators must do a better job
collecting and analyzing data in order to
understand how women are and are not
being served by the financial sector
to build a more inclusive financial system
and a more inclusive economy central banks
need to consider the impact that policy
reforms can have on all citizens and
where women's experience might be
quite different from those of men.
2nd when drafting new regulations or
evaluating existing ones
I urged central bankers and financial
regulators to consider whether regulations
could help to promote financial inclusion
as well as financial stability or
at the very least whether regulation
should not serve shouldn't serve as
an unnecessary deterrent to inclusion and
especially to the inclusion of women
who constitute the vast majority
of the unbanked today and
then 3rd when seeking to promote
women's financial inclusion
central bankers regulators and industry
need to consider what products and
services are most important to addressing
the needs of women in developing countries
while some work has already be done
been done on savings products more work
is ahead to close the credit gap for women
and to address the unintended consequences
in product regulate product related
regulations such as the treatment of
dormant accounts collateral and
even that broader issue of identity
how can we prepare central banks and
financial regulators to address these
areas of focus with a gender lens as they
build the central bank of the future
studies have shown that the greater
the focus on diversity and gender parity
within regulatory institutions the greater
the emphasis on women as clients and
as leaders within the financial
institutions they oversee
what's more there's a growing
body of research like the i.m.f.
spanking on women leaders study
led by rightness the high
suggesting that higher shares of women on
the boards of banking supervision agencies
is associated with greater bank stability.
We know that diversity drives better
decision making in fact failing to
have a variety of profiles and
perspectives around the table as well as
having gender parity leads to riskier
decisions and weaker institutions
that's why this year women's world banking
launched our 1st leadership in diversity
for regulators program it's a global
offering designed in partnership with
the Alliance for financial inclusion and
taught by women's world banking and
faculty members from Oxford University
side business school the course brings
together senior officials from central
banks and other regulatory agencies
together with high potential women from
those respective institutions in a 9 month
leadership program each senior official
identifies a policy initiative to
sponsor at their institution that's
related to serving the women's market and
then works with a high potential woman
leader to implement that initiative while
simultaneously supporting her professional
development during and after the program
for instance in this year's program
the central bank of Egypt has worked to
develop a clear plan to promote women's
economic empowerment and I'm delighted to
see deputy governor Loba novella
excuse me hello in the audience today
their strategy was quite comprehensive
It includes initiatives to measure
the levels of women's representation
across various sectors review gender
based pay gaps conduct unconscious
gender bias training and initiate
support programs to build female talent
pipelines across the banking sector.
Another example comes from the central
banker for Wanda where they also developed
an impressive strategy to advance women's
financial inclusion by using digital
financial services to accelerate the
formal financial inclusion of traditional
smart savings groups by using digital
technology to map stakeholders and
facilitate data collection the central
bank plans to financially include
$220000.00 women in formal financial
institutions in the coming year
I find these initiatives
particularly exciting and
inspiring because we're seeing the central
banks challenging themselves to think more
expansively about their mandate to drive
inclusion beyond the narrow confines
of regulation from Egypt looking to drive
behavior change in the entire sector that
they're regulating to all Rwanda looking
to bring traditional savings groups
into the digital world in collaboration
with the private sector one central
banks financial regulators standard
setters and industry focus on these 3
areas gender desegregated data regulations
that promote financial stability and
inclusion and products and
services appropriate for women
what can we realistically expect
as outcomes I'd suggest that
we ask Waka the near Nigerian fruit
seller to serve as an inspiration for
us she was once a merchant struggling
to earn a living wage and pay for
her children's school fees but
thanks to the foresight
of local regulators who recognized
that some of their own regulations
were unnecessarily excluding
unbanked individuals such as one.
And thanks to the innovations of financial
service providers who are willing to
re-evaluate their product offerings and
develop more appropriate tools for
potential customers like walk she
is literally a changed woman today.
She went from believing that banks had
no interest in her business prospects
to becoming an active saver in a bank
she expresses great pride in her financial
a compliment cop complements and
she's quick to encourage her friends and
families to open their own better accounts
of her savings helped her to expand her
business such that she's now looking for
that larger stall in a busier part
of the market her growing success
unable to her to pay those school fees
that she once found so daunting so much so
that all of her children are finishing
their secondary schooling with plans to
attend university something that Walker
who had only minimal schooling herself
never imagined might be possible for
all of her kids countless
women like walk around the world
are doing their best to provide their for
their families with limited or no access
to financial services today let's do our
part to make sure that they can improve
their ability to save to borrow and
to conduct payments efficiently and
safely let's help them
create their own means to lift themselves
and their families out of poverty
let's empower them to pursue
participate more fully
in the formal economy and
in broader society the central bank of
the future has a stake in these women
just as these women have a stake in the
central bank of the future thank you so
much for your attention I know I am
the things standing between you and
the cocktail party but if you'd like to
ask some questions I'd be delighted to
to continue the conversation thank you so
much.
I think that during his
working pretty good.
That is a better all right Hi I'm Brian
Ricketts I'm a current public policy and
business student here at the university
I just want to thank you for
being here thank you Doc I wanted to
ask you if if you'd seen banks who
were working to be more inclusive on
the consumer facing side they've got these
deposits Do you also see the same impacts
with what they do on those deposits
it's a really great question
in fact if anything we find it
easier to sell banks on the credit
opportunity than we do on
the savings opportunities so we've
become very big proponents of bundling.
Product opportunities because as I
mentioned the women really do want
that safe place to save but the banks
want to make money by lending to them so
that bundling can really
make all the difference.
I wondering if you could give
us some advice about how do
you engage mobilize energize
the people on the ground
to get involved in a conversation
about the central bank of the future
I mean in your experience what is
it is there a way to translate.
People's you know real live need for
better financial services
into mobilization for change.
Well I think the fact that you've been
able to bring so many regulators from
developing economies to this to this
venue in this conference says a lot about
the excitement and certainly our of
our regulators program we were just
blown away by the enthusiasm that I
think there's a tremendous desire
to reach those who are on Reach there's
a very keen understanding of last mile
issues I found amongst
the the regulators that we talked to and
I so I do think that raising awareness is
probably those the single best thing that
we we can do making it
clear that this is a market
that can be served that these
are valuable customers who are.
Just in terms of this sheer scale of
serving them can make it very very
important difference to the financial
system that's I'd say that's really my
Our experience is just making it making
the awareness and we're not the only ones
doing that obviously the global phonetics
and many of you in the room have been
big contributors there but it's least
marks perience as when the regulators
are aware of the scale of the issue there
they're eager to join in the conversation.
Thank you very much Mary and
thank you very inspiring keynote
to good little newts to memories
of the path life you know.
Some of the most of the examples here have
to do with how women's world banking is
working with banks Trojan banks part of
the conversations we had at the Tuesday or
meetings we're looking at some of
these other participants that are not
trying to tional financial institutions
can you speak a **** at all about
what women's will banking is doing
with these alternatives should I think
it's provided that I've not tried to no
bank and where you see an opportunity for
them to you know take financial
inclusion further because perhaps.
What is seen in the high domain Siri
may be a dissatisfaction with what
the trying to shut off when and
also with what you think policymakers and
how policymakers can and connect to it
these are the providers to fame way in
some of these examples you had to have the
central banks and the punishable by does
you know come up with an reduce Lucian's
how can we then take that for the 2 D's
nontraditional financial service providers
that's a really great question and
we're only just starting to work with
some of these newer providers but one
thing that's been really interesting and
actually we're seeing this maybe a little
bit more on our Impact Investment Fund
than we are in the angio activities but
we've seen this sort of trend where fin
techs who are sort of in their series b.
round coming to us saying we never
thought we didn't plan to have a majority
of women clients but when we look at
who's you know alternative credit
scoring model companies alternative
lending platforms peer to peer lending
platforms have been terrific for women and
a lot of the countries we work in and
the the entrepreneurs who
are setting up the company and
now we're trying to raise a 2nd round of
funding are realizing that's who that's
who they're they're banking now we have
real concerns about digital credit and
the consumer protection issues
around that and that's that's been
another really important part of our
dialogue with those companies and
where I think regulatory bodies
absolutely have to stay focused I mean
Women's World Banking had its origins
in the micro finance industry and
I fear that some of what's going on
in digital credit today is worse than
anything we saw on the micro finance
industry in terms of overindebtedness and
interest rates and and.
And now frankly n.p.l.
for for those institutions so
I think that there is a huge
possibility but particularly for women.
If you know you've seen in
the some of the pays you go.
A solar business is now really looking
much more like a financial service
companies and we've been in guys in
a few of them about their offerings
you know once that woman has that asset
of the solar lamp that she's been making
payments diligently for and some of the
pays you go energy companies are reporting
to credit bureaus to allow those
women to to build credit histories
they're starting to make loans
with the solar lamp says
as collateral Interestingly one of them
came to us recently and said the men all
want to borrow for television sets
the women all want agricultural inputs and
education and so
you know some things never change but
I think there's just a huge
opportunity there for for those but
I'd say making sure that people
are protected that the digital literacy is
there as well as the financial literacy in
the consumer protection it is in place b.
I see Job one.
I'm seeing there wrap it up sign here
Kristie yeah thank you all very much
thank you thank you.