The Herald

Relationship between education and financial inclusion

Sanderson Abel
Financial education is the process of building knowledge, skills and attitudes to become financially literate.

It is meant to educate people on good money management practices with respect to earning, spending, saving, borrowing, and investing.

Financial education is meant to enable people to shift from reactive to proactive decision-making and work towards fulfilling their financial goals.

By broadening people’s understanding of financial options and principles, financial education builds skills to use financial products and services, and promotes attitudes and behaviours that support more effective use of scarce financial resources.

Studies have shown that a large section of population lack access to basic financial services from the formal financial sector and hence moving towards universal financial inclusion should be both a national commitment and a policy priority.

Financial education is hence an important component for promoting financial inclusion, consumer protection and ultimately financial stability.

Financial inclusion and financial education need to go hand in hand to enable the common man to understand the need and benefits of the products and services offered by formal financial institutions.

These include the following: ability to access affordable credit, no difficulty in obtaining a bank account, reduced amount of financially risk through not having home insurance, ability to budget and manage money or plan for the unexpected and ability to make the most out of their money.

What is the relationship between financial education and financial inclusion?

Financial education is an important tool to help consumers both accept and use the financial products to which they increasingly have access.

Because it can facilitate effective product use, financial education is critical to financial inclusion.

What should be the objectives of the broader financial education programmes?

Financial inclusion implies an alignment of supply and demand, where financially literate consumers have opportunities to apply their knowledge in a marketplace of appropriate product options.

Given the criticality of financial inclusion especially in our economy there is need for concerted effort towards encouraging financial education programs.

These programs should have three broad objectives that correspond to overlapping, inter-related interests of these three stakeholders.

Financial inclusion and financial education are closely linked concepts. Financial education is meant to motivate the learner to understand the advantages of transactions with mainstream financial institutions and adopt available formal financial services.

Financial inclusion is thus the process of bringing people from the margin to the mainstream, linking them to mainstream financial institutions so that they become customers of banks and are able to access the full range of services – savings, deposits, loans, which the banks offer.

Financial education is key to promoting financial inclusion which is a step towards customer protection as it ensures linkage with mainstream financial institutions so that the hapless borrower is not at the mercy of the informal service providers who charge notoriously high rates of interest.