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Financial inclusion and sustainable development: an empirical association

Financial inclusion and sustainable development: an empirical association This paper aims to investigate the association between financial inclusion and sustainable development in a global context.Design/methodology/approachThe study used two datasets, and employed the Pearson correlation analysis and granger causality test to examine the correlation and pairwise causality between financial inclusion and sustainable development.FindingsHigh levels of financial inclusion (in terms of higher commercial bank branches per 100,000 adults) is significantly associated with higher electricity production from renewable sources, higher industry productivity, higher adult literacy rate and higher renewable electricity output. Also, higher financial inclusion is significantly associated with low combustible renewables and waste. There is a uni-directional granger causality between global interest in internet information about sustainable development and global interest in internet information about financial inclusion, particularly in the period after the global financial crisis but before the COVID-19 pandemic.Practical implicationsThe correlation between financial inclusion and sustainable development depends on the indicators employed to measure financial inclusion and sustainable development. The results support global calls for greater financial inclusion and the speedy attainment of the sustainable development goals for the good of all people, the environment and for the planet.Originality/valueThis paper is the first study in the literature to analyze the link between financial inclusion and sustainable development using global data. This study contributes to the existing literature by investigating the association between financial inclusion and sustainable development in a global context. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Money and Business Emerald Publishing

Financial inclusion and sustainable development: an empirical association

Journal of Money and Business , Volume 2 (2): 13 – Nov 18, 2022

Financial inclusion and sustainable development: an empirical association

Journal of Money and Business , Volume 2 (2): 13 – Nov 18, 2022

Abstract

This paper aims to investigate the association between financial inclusion and sustainable development in a global context.Design/methodology/approachThe study used two datasets, and employed the Pearson correlation analysis and granger causality test to examine the correlation and pairwise causality between financial inclusion and sustainable development.FindingsHigh levels of financial inclusion (in terms of higher commercial bank branches per 100,000 adults) is significantly associated with higher electricity production from renewable sources, higher industry productivity, higher adult literacy rate and higher renewable electricity output. Also, higher financial inclusion is significantly associated with low combustible renewables and waste. There is a uni-directional granger causality between global interest in internet information about sustainable development and global interest in internet information about financial inclusion, particularly in the period after the global financial crisis but before the COVID-19 pandemic.Practical implicationsThe correlation between financial inclusion and sustainable development depends on the indicators employed to measure financial inclusion and sustainable development. The results support global calls for greater financial inclusion and the speedy attainment of the sustainable development goals for the good of all people, the environment and for the planet.Originality/valueThis paper is the first study in the literature to analyze the link between financial inclusion and sustainable development using global data. This study contributes to the existing literature by investigating the association between financial inclusion and sustainable development in a global context.

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Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
© Peterson K. Ozili
ISSN
2634-2596
eISSN
2634-260X
DOI
10.1108/jmb-03-2022-0019
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

This paper aims to investigate the association between financial inclusion and sustainable development in a global context.Design/methodology/approachThe study used two datasets, and employed the Pearson correlation analysis and granger causality test to examine the correlation and pairwise causality between financial inclusion and sustainable development.FindingsHigh levels of financial inclusion (in terms of higher commercial bank branches per 100,000 adults) is significantly associated with higher electricity production from renewable sources, higher industry productivity, higher adult literacy rate and higher renewable electricity output. Also, higher financial inclusion is significantly associated with low combustible renewables and waste. There is a uni-directional granger causality between global interest in internet information about sustainable development and global interest in internet information about financial inclusion, particularly in the period after the global financial crisis but before the COVID-19 pandemic.Practical implicationsThe correlation between financial inclusion and sustainable development depends on the indicators employed to measure financial inclusion and sustainable development. The results support global calls for greater financial inclusion and the speedy attainment of the sustainable development goals for the good of all people, the environment and for the planet.Originality/valueThis paper is the first study in the literature to analyze the link between financial inclusion and sustainable development using global data. This study contributes to the existing literature by investigating the association between financial inclusion and sustainable development in a global context.

Journal

Journal of Money and BusinessEmerald Publishing

Published: Nov 18, 2022

Keywords: Financial inclusion; Sustainable development goals; Access to finance; Energy; Renewables; Adult literacy; Industry; Electricity; Access to finance; Unbanked adults; Environment

References