Wednesday, January 09, 2008

What Is: Financial Inclusion

Promoting financial inclusion

Over a million adults in Britain still live their lives without the most basic of financial products. Some 6-9 per cent of all households do not have any kind of bank or building society account and 14-23 per cent live without the flexibility of a current account. [Footnote 1] There is a large minority of people for whom the financial services revolution has effectively passed them by; they are financially excluded. Against this backdrop, Faith Reynolds assesses some current initiatives that are attempting to promote greater financial inclusion.

The reality of financial exclusion
Underpinning financial exclusion are problems of poverty, ignorance and environment:

  • Poverty: being on a low income, especially out of work and on benefits.

  • Ignorance: low levels of awareness and understanding of products caused by lack of appropriate marketing or low levels of financial literacy.

  • Environment: lack of access to financial services caused by several factors, including:
      – geographic access to bank branches or remote banking facilities;
      – affordability of products such as insurance, where premiums often price out those living in the most deprived and risky areas;
      – suitability of products like current accounts, which offer an overdraft and an easy route to debt;
      – regulatory barriers, such as the money laundering guidelines requiring proof of identification which many people find difficult to provide;
      – cultural and psychological barriers, such as language, perceived/actual racism and suspicion or fear of financial institutions.


Bar chart showing percentage of households without various financial products

The implications of being financially excluded
Living without financial products is a significant disadvantage in an age where cash is slowly being replaced by debit cards and automated transactions, and living on credit is the norm. Having no insurance exacerbates the effects of theft. Outside of mainstream financial products, saving options are informal and unreliable. Discounts on utility bills for paying by direct debit are inaccessible. Affordable short-term credit is replaced by sub-prime lenders offering credit on APRs that often exceed 100 per cent, pawn brokers and loan sharks. Being financially excluded can cost and it is the most deprived who pay the price.

Toynbee Hall and SAFE: Services Against Financial Exclusion
Toynbee Hall is a voluntary organisation that was established in 1884 to alleviate poverty in the East End of London, an area with a history of deprivation. Toynbee Hall has a tradition of developing innovative services. Indeed, Child Poverty Action Group started at Toynbee Hall in 1965.[Footnote 2] A more recent addition is SAFE: Services Against Financial Exclusion. SAFE was launched in March 2002 and currently offers financial information and education, promotes access to basic bank accounts and to the Saving Gateway, a government pilot savings scheme. SAFE also works in partnership with Toynbee’s free legal advice service, The Environment Trust and Quaker Social Action to promote free debt advice and access to free training opportunities and micro-finance (through the Community Finance and Learning Initiative).

The problems underpinning financial exclusion are interlinked and need to be addressed jointly as well as individually. Financial inclusion is a key part of the Government’s social inclusion policy and it has applied pressure on its departments to review, reform and regulate where necessary. Others have taken up the baton, including various policy makers, the Financial Services Authority (whose job it is to promote public awareness of UK financial systems) and the voluntary sector. Some financial institutions have also made costly, if, in some cases, half-hearted steps towards promoting financial inclusion. ‘Joined-up doing’ (as well as thinking) is needed to ensure financial inclusion becomes reality.

There are many initiatives being established across the country with the aim of tackling financial exclusion. The following discussion highlights three common themes of these initiatives and some of their policy implications.

The community Toynbee Hall serves
There are a number of different factors which aggravate financial exlusion and which make residents vulnerable to financial (if not other) forms or exclusion:
Being on a low income:
In 1999 over 60 per cent of households had a gross income of less than £10,000.
Being unemployed:
11.8 per cent are out of work, compared with the national average of 3.8 per cent.
Suffering long-term illness or disbility:
9.2 per cent of Tower Hamlets residents are in receipt of incapacity benefit, compared with 6.2 per cent for the UK.
Being in certain ethnic groups:
Nearly a quarter of the entire British Bangladeshi population live in Tower Hamlets. This group is the most deprived in the UK with 70 per cent in the bottom 20 per cent of the income range.
Living in areas of high deprivation:
The ward of Spitalfields is ranked 41st on the index of deprivation and st for housing deprivation.

Asset-building and the Saving Gateway
The anti-poverty lobby and living wage campaign are well established. A more recent innovation is asset-based welfare policy. It is suggested that increasing an individual’s or community’s asset holding can increase social mobility and offer a positive route out of financial exclusion and poverty.[Footnote 3]

Raising income is part of the Government’s welfare policy and financial assets have a complementary role to play. [Footnote 4] Having money put aside smoothes peaks and troughs (and acts as an alternative to a short-term loan); it also allows people to take advantage of opportunities which might otherwise be denied (eg, paying for further education); in the longer term it can offer a more comfortable retirement. The act of saving reinforces longer-term thinking and a sense of responsibility for one’s future. Holding a savings product also reduces financial exclusion.

Research shows that people on lower incomes are least likely to save or hold assets.[Footnote 5] They are also unlikely to be affected by tax breaks, which might be attractive to people on higher incomes. The Saving Gateway is one policy the Government is piloting to encourage low-income households into saving. The scheme offers to match an individual’s savings, a pound for a pound up to a specified limit and is run through trusted community-based organisations, which act as intermediaries between the client and the delegated bank (the Halifax). Given the expense of the project and the target group, the Saving Gateway has caused much controversy.

One valid question raised by the Institute for Fiscal Studies [Footnote 6] is whether people on low incomes should be encouraged to save in the first place and incentivised with such high returns. Its work suggests that only one in eight of the poorest fifth of the population will benefit from the Saving Gateway in the way that the Government [Footnote 7] expects and that those left may indeed borrow to save into the scheme. Others argue that people on such low incomes do not have a disposable income in any case. If their low levels of income necessitate a hand-to-mouth existence, should longer-term thinking and financial planning be encouraged? Increasing income should be the priority.

Research from a similar scheme in America shows that people on low incomes can, and perhaps more importantly want to, save small amounts on a regular basis. For many people the Saving Gateway replaces an existing informal form of saving (the jam jar for instance). The saving scheme offers a decent return on very small savings that people on higher incomes would benefit from through tiered interest rates and tax breaks. Why should poor people not reap as comparable rewards for saving as people on higher incomes?

A balanced view needs to be taken on asset-based welfare policy: it is not a case of either income or assets, but of both income and assets. For those people who want it, there should be the opportunity of saving and reaping clear benefits. If the aim is to increase financial inclusion, the answer is not to keep people in ignorance, excluded from products that policy makers judge unsuitable. People on low incomes have every right to make the decision for themselves. Policy, therefore, needs to be equally concerned with what informs individuals’ decisions and how education can best be delivered to ensure that all people (whatever their income) are enabled to make the right decision given their circumstances.

Financial education
The five Saving Gateway pilots do not stand alone but, in all but one case, are run alongside a Community Finance and Learning Initiative (CFLI). One of the objectives of the CFLI is to promote financial literacy through the provision of financial education. The National Foundation of Educational Research describes financial literacy as the ‘ability to make informed judgements and to take effective decisions regarding the use and management of money’.

The delivery of financial education can be said to comprise three key themes: building skills, increasing knowledge and developing understanding and within each of these a client’s confidence should also be developed.

Building skills
Literacy and numeracy are fundamental skills in managing money and understanding the plethora of financial products available by which to do so. Research commissioned by the Basic Skills Agency (BSA) [Footnote 8] shows that there is a link between people who have low levels of literacy and numeracy and financial difficulties. Almost one in four people (23 per cent of population) do not have the basic skills expected of an 11-year-old. Moreover, research shows that whilst people with poor basic skills do hold financial products, they are less likely to do so.[Footnote 9] Consequently, the BSA has developed useful resources for delivering financial education to people with basic skills needs [Footnote 10] and worked with four financial institutions to train front-line workers in helping customers with basic skills needs.

Increasing knowledge
Raising awareness and increasing knowledge of financial products is key in helping people make informed decisions. Financial institutions tend not to market very deprived areas, where residents are more likely to already be financially excluded.[Footnote 11] As such, residents of these areas are even less likely to become aware of suitable products as they come onto the market. In terms of promoting financial inclusion, much of the work is simply in providing easily understood information in a safe and engaging environment. To this end the Financial Services Authority has produced a detailed consumer website, various free leaflets and a financial planning CD-Rom [Footnote 12] and these are publicly available through CABs, libraries, post offices and the like. Financial providers and other trusted local community organisations also make excellent vessels for disseminating such information.

Developing understanding
Whilst increasing knowledge is mostly about the provision of information, developing understanding is about giving an individual a strategy for dealing with this information, which might include skills for budgeting, planning, understanding the types of products available and shopping around to find the best deal. There is no definitive way for delivering this type of training but it is generally agreed that, for the client, there has to be ‘something in it for me’. Debt advice, basic skills courses and initiatives like the Saving Gateway can be useful ‘carrots’ for engaging people in financial education and resources like the Adult Financial Capability Framework [Footnote 13] give a sound structure from which to plan the training.

Building confidence
All aspects of training should build an individual’s confidence. The skills and confidence necessary for filling out forms, asking questions, getting further clarification and making complaints in an effective manner are all too often taken for granted. In all aspects of training there needs to be constant affirmation of the individual, the individual’s rights and significance as a citizen in our society (and of their consequent responsibilities towards others). An individual has a right to ask questions and receive answers that make sense to them from a person who is able to see beyond their own needs and react in a positive way.

Basic bank accounts
There is, however, no single solution for financial exclusion and a financially capable adult has little chance of becoming financially included if the environment is set against them. The Government has made significant moves to promote a more accessible environment [Footnote 14] but one initiative is of particular relevance at the time of writing: access to mainstream financial services through the provision of appropriate financial products.

Apart from wishing to promote a socially cohesive society more generally, the Government has a vested interest in advancing financial inclusion and access to mainstream financial services. In 1999 the decision was taken to move all benefits payments from giro to automated credit payments (ACT) by 2003, thus saving the Government (and the tax payer) approximately £650m a year in administration costs and fraud. [Footnote 15] However, this relies upon recipients having some kind of account to which benefits can be credited.

A universal bank was initially proposed. This was to be a no frills banking service available through post offices. Not only would the universal bank promote financial inclusion, but it would also advance benefits reform and modernise post offices. The cost of doing so, however, was considered too great and neither the Government nor the banking industry would pay the bill. Instead the paper-based giro has been replaced by the post office card account (POCA). This allows benefits (not salaries) to be paid by ACT and withdrawn in cash at a post office as before, but otherwise offers very little flexibility. Alongside POCA some 18 financial institutions have so far developed (or committed to develop) a basic bank account. These accounts vary by bank, but are similar to a standard current account without an overdraft facility or cheque book. With no overdraft users do not need to be credit scored nor fear losing control of their money. Customers can set up standing orders and direct debits, use their Solo or Electron card for debit transactions, as well as withdraw cash from cashpoints and their benefits from a post office.

There have, however, been some complaints about the lack of marketing for basic bank accounts and some banks’ hesitancy in embracing the basic bank account target group. The problem is that basic bank accounts are considered unprofitable.

It should not be forgotten that banks and building societies are profit-making institutions with shareholders and that the local branch is similar to any other shop – it is there to sell a product. It is estimated that if all 13 million benefits recipients decided to use standard or basic bank accounts (which is unlikely in the early years, but surely the ultimate aim for the future) then the total costs to the industry could be as high as £1 billion. Incremental costs could be £400-£650 million if each account costs £30-£50 per annum. [Footnote16] Whilst the Government will make considerable savings by transferring benefits payments to ACT, the banking industry, without any financial incentive or government subsidy, will pay considerable costs to support the initiative.

On the other hand, however, it would be somewhat short-sighted to believe there is no business case for the basic bank account. The Government spends several millions of pounds in benefits and tax credits. This could be money flowing straight to financial institutions, which may not always flow straight out. The number of benefit recipients hits millions and it is plausible that a financial institution could expand its client base (and profits) significantly by actively marketing its basic bank account (especially in deprived areas) and later cross-selling products (eg, savings accounts). It is also likely that for some customers a standard account with an overdraft facility will be appropriate and profitable. For many, overdrafts offer a cheap and reliable form of short-term credit which in the longer term some basic bank account clients may graduate towards. Further development to structure the repayments of overdrafts could also increase confidence and a sense of being in control among potential users whilst keeping defaults low. The labour market and income levels are also variants which should be taken into account: today’s single mother with a baby on income support may well be next year’s new business entrepreneur.

A new approach to basic bank accounts and people on benefits needs to be adopted. By non-marketing the basic bank account and by giving staff no financial incentive to sell it [Footnote 17] a negative view of the target group is reinforced both to staff and society more generally. The cultural barrier between the financial institution and the financially excluded simply widens further.

Many banks already embrace corporate social responsibility, make generous donations and send volunteers to local community organisations. The next step is for corporate social responsibility to have an impact on the way banks do business. This is already happening to some degree through community banking programmes (for instance, the Bank of Scotland’s work with the Big Issue to provide basic bank accounts and an appropriate saving scheme [Footnote 18), initiatives like the Saving Gateway and training packages produced by the Basic Skills Agency, but it needs to happen on a much larger scale.

The voluntary sector has a key role to play in promoting initiatives like the Saving Gateway and other community banking programmes, as well as in informing, supporting and being positive about financial institutions’ steps towards financial inclusion. Similarly, some parts of the financial sector need to open their doors more widely, become aware of the neighbourhoods in which they work and promote a more outward-looking, customer-centric model to work alongside their target-based, profit-driven model.

Conclusion
In conclusion, there are many issues (some which are not mentioned above) which need to be taken into account when considering the best course towards financial inclusion. A recent report on poverty [Footnote 19] suggests that there has been little change over the last five years in the number of financially excluded people. There is still a long way to go, but the need for change becomes ever more acute. One of the main characteristics of the work should be that it is collaborative and ‘joined-up’, harnessing the strengths and expertise of all those involved, whether in policy, government, regulation, education, industry or the voluntary sector.

Faith Reynolds is the co-ordinator of SAFE (Services Against Financial Exclusion) at Toynbee Hall in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets

Thanks go to Ian McGimpsey and Luke Geoghegan of Toynbee Hall, and volunteers Sean Williams, Will Paxton and Gill Hind for their help with this article.

http://www.cpag.org.uk/info/Povertyarticles/Poverty114/financial.htm

Financial inclusion index

The importance of financial services in all of our lives has, in recent years, risen significantly. This is a consequence of both a growing and more prosperous United Kingdom economy, and an innovative financial services sector, which has developed ever more ways of meeting the needs of its customers. Exclusion from the financial system brings with it, therefore, real and rising costs, often borne by those who can least afford them, which is why promoting financial inclusion has been, and continues to be, a key priority for the Government.

To ensure that as few people as possible have to bear these costs, the Government has taken responsibility for developing a strategic policy response, working with key stakeholders from the financial services industry, the third sector, and elsewhere. The Government’s key goals for financial inclusion are about ensuring that everyone has access to appropriate financial services, enabling them to:

  • manage their money on a day-to-day basis,effectively, securely and confidently;
  • plan for the future and cope with financial pressure, by managing their finances to protect against short-term variations in income and expenditure, and to take advantage of longer-term opportunities; and
  • deal effectively with financial distress,should unexpected events lead to serious financial difficulty.

The Government’s action plan for financial inclusion, Financial inclusion: an action plan for 2008-11, sets out in detail how the Government will use the £130 million Financial Inclusion Fund, announced in the CSR, to achieve its financial inclusion objectives over the next three-year spending period from April 2008 to March 2011.

Financial Inclusion - the way forward

This action plan builds on Financial Inclusion - the way forward, which sets out the policy framework for financial inclusion in 2008-11, including:

  • a new Financial Inclusion Fund for 2008-11;
  • an extension to the Financial Inclusion Taskforce until March 2011, so that it can continue to monitor and evaluate progress and advise the Government on financial inclusion developments; and
  • a ministerial working group chaired by the Economic Secretary to the Treasury, with members from the Department for Work and Pensions, the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform, the Department for Communities and Local Government, the Cabinet Office and the Ministry of Justice to develop an action plan for financial inclusion in 2008-11.

Promoting Financial Inclusion

The Government's first financial inclusion strategy, Promoting financial inclusion, was published in December 2004. This:

  • announced the creation of a dedicated Financial Inclusion Fund of £120 million for the 2005-08 spending period;
  • announced a goal, shared between Government and the banks, to halve the number of adults living in households without access to a bank account, and to make significant progress within two years – recently announced that 60 per cent of the progress required to achieve the shared goal had been made; and
  • established an independent Financial Inclusion Taskforce to advise the Government and monitor progress.
http://www.hm-treasury.gov.uk/documents/financial_services/financial_inclusion/Financial_inclusion_index.cfm

    • What is 'Financial Inclusion' ?
      "Financial inclusion is delivery of banking services at an affordable cost ('no frills' accounts,) to the vast sections of disadvantaged and low income group. Unrestrained access to public goods and services is the sine qua non of an open and efficient society. As banking services are in the nature of public good, it is essential that availability of banking and payment services to the entire population without discrimination is the prime objective of the public policy."

Areas of concern by banks
  • The banking industry has shown tremendous growth in volume and complexity during the last few decades.

  • Despite making significant improvements in all the areas relating to financial viability, profitability and competitiveness, there are concerns that banks have not been able to reach and bring vast segment of the population, especially the underprivileged sections of the society, into the fold of basic banking services.

  • Internationally also efforts are being made to study the causes of financial exclusion and design strategies to ensure financial inclusion of the poor and disadvantaged.

  • The reasons may vary from country to country and so also the strategy but all out efforts are needed as financial inclusion can truly lift the standard of life of the poor and the disadvantaged.
RBI's Policy on 'Financial Inclusion' :
  • When bankers do not give the desired attention to certain areas, the regulators have to step in to remedy the situation. This is the reason why the Reserve Bank of India places a lot of emphasis on financial inclusion.

  • With a view to enhancing the financial inclusion, as a proactive measure, the RBI in its Annual Policy Statement of the year 2005-2006, while recognizing the concerns in regard to the banking practices that tend to exclude rather than attract vast sections of population, urged banks to review their existing practices to align them with the objective of financial inclusion.

  • No-Frills' Account :
    • In the Mid Term Review of the Policy (2005-06), RBI exhorted the banks, with a view to achieving greater financial inclusion, to make available a basic banking 'no frills' account either with 'NIL' or very minimum balances as well as charges that would make such accounts accessible to vast sections of the population. The nature and number of transactions in such accounts would be restricted and made known to customers in advance in a transparent manner. All banks are urged to give wide publicity to the facility of such 'no frills' account, so as to ensure greater financial inclusion.

  • 'Simplification of 'Know Your Customer (KYC)' Norms :
    • Banks are required to provide a choice of a 'no frills account' where the minimum balance is nil or very small but having restrictions on number of withdrawals, etc., to facilitate easy access to bank accounts.

    • Further, in order to ensure that persons belonging to low income group both in urban and rural areas do not face difficulty in opening the bank accounts due to the procedural hassles, the 'KYC' procedure for opening accounts for those persons who intend to keep balances not exceeding rupees fifty thousand (Rs. 50,000/-) in all their accounts taken together and the total credit in all the accounts taken together is not expected to exceed rupees one lakh (Rs. 1,00,000/-) in a year has been simplified to enable those belonging to low income groups without documents of identity and proof of residence to open banks accounts. In such cases banks can take introduction from an account holder on whom full KYC procedure has been completed and has had satisfactory transactions with the bank for at least six months. Photograph of the customer who proposes to open the account and his address need to be certified by the introducer.

  • Ensuring reasonableness of bank charges :
    • As the Reserve Bank has been receiving several representations from public about unreasonable service charges being levied by banks, the existing institutional mechanism in this regard is not adequate. Accordingly, and in order to ensure fair practices in banking services, the RBI has issued instructions to banks making it obligatory for them to display and continue to keep updated, in their offices/branches as also in their website, the details of various services charges in a format prescribed by it. The Reserve Bank has also decided to place details relating to service charges of individual banks for the most common services in its website

    http://www.iibf.org.in/financeq/iib_financeinclusion.asp

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