Fintech, financial inclusion, and entrepreneurship outcomes for women, youth, and MSMEs: Pathways, evidence, and policy priorities
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.51867/scimundi.6.1.26Keywords:
Digital Finance, FinTech, Financial Inclusion, MSMEs, Women Entrepreneurship, Youth EntrepreneurshipAbstract
This paper examines the role of FinTech in expanding financial access and, critically, whether this access translates into improved entrepreneurship outcomes for women, youth, and micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs). Digital financial services have expanded rapidly across developing economies, yet current financial inclusion efforts remain disproportionately focused on access metrics rather than on meaningful enterprise outcomes such as improved resilience, productivity, and growth. This paper develops a mechanisms-based framework organised around four FinTech rails: digital payments and mobile money, digital credit, digital savings, and interoperability and data platforms. For each rail, the paper traces the channels through which improved inclusion quality affects entrepreneurship outcomes, including transaction cost reduction, enhanced risk sharing, smoother working capital, improved supplier and customer relations, and better investment screening. Four theoretical frameworks are relevant to the FinTech-to-inclusion-to-entrepreneurship pathway. Transaction cost economics, Information economics, Risk-sharing theory and theory of inclusive finance and digital adoption. Drawing on a structured narrative synthesis of peer-reviewed empirical studies, primarily from Sub-Saharan Africa, the paper finds that the most robust and consistent impacts of FinTech are on resilience and risk sharing, while productivity and growth effects are heterogeneous and conditional on infrastructure quality, market structure, and the financial and digital capabilities of entrepreneurs. The paper also identifies systemic risks associated with rapid FinTech scaling, including over-indebtedness, digital fraud, market concentration, and persistent digital divides that disproportionately affect women and youth. Based on this analysis, five evidence-grounded policy recommendations are advanced covering interoperable payment systems, proportionate digital credit regulation, gender- and youth-responsive onboarding, integrated capability building, and outcome-based monitoring frameworks.
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