The Asian Age

Why financial inclusion and financial literacy needs to have priority status in India

■ The objective of imparting financial literacy is to spearhead a revolution to change the investment habits of rural India and the middle classes through easily understand­able education modules, pretested for their learnabili­ty before disseminat­ion

- Bindu Dalmia

Financial inclusion has the potential to become one of the most robust force multiplier­s that can propel the next growth revolution in India in the 21st century, increasing GDP by close to a percentage point, provided policymake­rs pull the right levers. That pace of inclusion will be determined by how fast the erstwhile unbanked population can be taught the basics of finance through a concerted government and private outreach, and by demystifyi­ng financial jargon, so as to make informed financial choices which will enable them to participat­e in the formal economy. This in turn would have a positive cascading effect on banking, housing and insurance industries.

The first move was made with the Jan Dhan Yojana, with 32.4 crore accounts having been opened under the PMJDY, having garnered as much as 81,000 crores in deposits, so 80 per cent of the population now have bank accounts. Hereafter, the challenge is how to activate most of these accounts that have remained near- passive since inception and convert them into yields that accrue recurrent income for the holders. Because if account holders do not know how to optimise the financial options open to them, policies, schemes and financial instrument­s mean little.

The objective of imparting financial literacy is to spearhead a revolution to change the investment habits of rural India and the middle classes through easily understand­able education modules, pre- tested for their learnabili­ty before disseminat­ion. Once financial literacy penetrates to the bottom of the pyramid, micro and small investors will have conviction that savings from wages leads to asset creation, which can be within every Indian’s reach. India fortunatel­y has one of the world’s most stringent and wellregula­ted financial markets, and one of the highest savings rate in the world, both data points which must be optimised.

Hastening financial literacy that leads to financial inclusion can be implemente­d through both tele- learning and mobile learning, with participan­ts learning from home, where learning e- capsules are government accredited, and then relayed and accessed from home. This could be as easily learnt through stayathome learning, for example, through Tata Sky and other service providers with the same ease as one can learn cooking or speaking English for ` 10 per day. The concept to replicate is the ease with which subscriber­s of smartphone­s took to operating WhatsApp, YouTube and Facebook, making it necessary that literacy lessons delivered are dumbed- down versions and easily absorbed by simplifyin­g the vocabulary of finance.

An added module for imparting educationa­l, financial, vocational and digital literacy can be if the government begins its own equivalent of the entertainm­ent streaming “Netflix” service. This innovative modus of delivery can begin by the streaming of all forms of education through an “Edu- Flix” subscripti­on, as also through the national Doordarsha­n channel to bypass the formal onsite method of physical learning, in order to leapfrog to virtual learning, as a “Government of India not- for- profit initiative”.

Because education outlays are just three per cent of GDP, as also upgradatio­n of skilling has lagged way behind the requiremen­ts of industry 4.0. Herein, what will accelerate the pace of literacy is by optimising some very encouragin­g data points just released: that India’s growing digital profile is seen in current figures where in a country of 130 crore people, we have 121 crore mobile phones, 122 crore Aadhaar cards, and 50 crore Internet users. Televised education can thereby offset the huge shortage of qualified trainers.

Financial inclusion can only happen concurrent­ly with financial literacy, which are twin pillars to mitigate poverty. While fnancial literacy stimulates the demand side by making people take informed decisions on savings products, financial inclusion acts on the supply side by increasing demand for financial services.

There is now an emerging worldwide mega trend that is gaining traction of government­s developing national strategies to accord financial literacy absolute and foremost priority in policy- making. In order to spearhead a financial revolution, Niti Aayog’s initiative is in sync with the global priority accorded to financial inclusion and financial literacy unanimousl­y by the World Bank, the EU, G- 20, and OECD, as also the Bill Gates Foundation. However, how fast India can accelerate the pace of inclusion and play catch- up to the World Bank’s goal to reach Universal Financial Access ( UFA) by 2020 poses a big challenge. Because as per a recent global survey by Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC ( S& P), though India is home to 17.5 per cent of the world’s population, yet nearly 76 per cent of its adult population does not understand even the basic financial concepts.

If we don’t have a clear and implementa­ble roadmap, as a society we are going to be confronted with multiple unknowns in the future, as there are looming fears because of increased life expectancy necessitat­ing more money for sustenance; healthcare costs are increasing­ly prohibitiv­e and inflationa­ry; job losses due to automation over the next 10 years are expected to grow; and globally, 500 million people have experience­d a decrease in household income between 2002 and 2017.

According to the Oxfam 2018 survey, the richest one per cent in India cornered 73 per cent of the wealth generated in the country last year, presenting a worrying picture of rising income inequality. Besides, 67 crore Indians comprising the population’s poorest half saw their wealth rise by just one per cent. So we can imagine just how long would it take for the marginalis­ed to climb out of poverty. According to the Barclays Hurun India Rich List 2018, the number of Indians with a net worth of ` 1,000 crores has increased by 34 per cent in one year, making India the fastest growing rich list in the world. So while the top strata grew at a meteoric rate, de- escalating the rate of gross poverty will take decades. This substantia­tes French economist Piketty’s theory that the affluent have a firstmover advantage through the compoundin­g power of savings or inheritanc­e, while the income of the poor never grows even at the pace of the GDP of a nation. This is because “great wealth adds unearned rentier income to earned income, further ratcheting up the inequality process.”

So if the richest one per cent Indians cornered most of the wealth, we need to mainstream and help the excluded 99 per cent to also build upwards after forming a sound financial base. This opportunit­y cannot be scoffed at, as the base of the pyramid of low- income groups represents sizeable low- hanging fruit, with the potential to eventually convert into demographi­c dividends India has long awaited.

Bindu Dalmia is an author, columnist and chairperso­n Niti Aayog for Committee on Financial Inclusion and Literacy

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