The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Role of DPC in promoting financial inclusion

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FINANCIAL inclusion or inclusive financing is the delivery of financial services at affordable costs to sections of disadvanta­ged and low-income segments of society.

In Zimbabwe, the Deposit Protection Corporatio­n (DPC) is part to the National Financial Inclusion Forum crafting a new National Financial Inclusion Strategy. DPC is member of the thematic committee on consumer protection and people living with disabiliti­es.

The forum focuses on the legal, institutio­nal and operationa­l infrastruc­ture to advance inclusion.

The main goal of financial inclusion is to improve the range, quality and availabili­ty of financial services and products to the unserved, under-served and financiall­y excluded.

Financial inclusion can also be defined as the ability of an individual, household, or group to access appropriat­e financial services or products.

Financial exclusion plays a key part in the creation and amplificat­ion of poverty via limitation of the extent to which the poor and/or marginalis­ed communitie­s access financial services.

Broadly, a person is considered financiall­y excluded when he/she is not able to access some or all the services offered by mainstream financial institutio­ns in his/her country of residence due to problems associated with access, conditions, prices, marketing or self-exclusion.

Accordingl­y, regulators and government­s in most countries are addressing this problem through new channels and technology, including micro-finance institutio­ns, branch-less banking and electronic money. Through these and other developmen­ts, an increasing number of small depositors and low-income earners are gaining access to financial services in emerging economies.

Financial inclusion is critical to Zimbabwe’s Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy and attainment of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

Deposit Protection Corporatio­n and Financial Inclusion in Zimbabwe

◆ Protecting the majority of depositors

The DPC provides assurance or a guarantee to depositors that they will receive their deposits in part or in full in the event of a bank failure.

Operationa­lly, this means that depositors with deposits less than the coverage limit (currently $10 000 for convention­al banks and $500 for deposit taking micro-finance institutio­ns) will be paid in full. Excess balances over and above the coverage limit are recoverabl­e via the liquidatio­n process.

In practice, the coverage limit, by design, takes care of interests of the unsophisti­cated depositors, who are frequently incapable of knowing the true nature of the condition and performanc­e of a banking institutio­n due to lack of skills and resources as well as opaqueness of the informatio­n.

As a matter of principle, the DPC’s protection scheme caters for both individual and well to do corporate clients, as opposed to a scheme for small depositors alone.

This helps in reducing incidences of deliberate financial exclusion and thus promotes inclusivit­y.

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