eMKambo Vibes – 6 February 2017
Why ‘financial inclusion’ may not be the correct terminology Over the past few years, financial authorities and development organizations in Africa have become fond of ‘financial inclusion’ as a process of involving many people in banking services. Unfortunately, such a notion reduces everything to money when focus should be on understanding socio-economic dynamics. Progress is less about money but more about grasping socio-economic ecosystems. By elevating finance, the notion of financial inclusion assumes money is all that is needed for development or progress. In African agriculture, financial institutions certainly need new selling points if they are to forge relationships with new actors like SMEs, farmers and traders. At the moment, financial inclusion is presented as if it is a favour to these economic actors. Banks continue to develop financial packages in offices with the assumption that these actors are desperate for money. Most traders and SMEs have been in business for more than 10 years without formal financial support. They probably need support in exploring export markets and improving the quality of their products, not how to start and run a business. They could be more interested in work space and serious recognition from policy makers not just paper recognition.
Who should include who? When financial institutions start working with SMEs and informal markets that is not financial inclusion. It should be a completely new socio-economic relationship, carefully defined and understood in terms of its requirements, partnership models and sustainability frameworks. In Zimbabwe, cash that used to move from farmers and commercial markets to banks has migrated to SMEs and informal markets where 1