We explore the impact of reduced transaction costs on risk sharing by estimating the effects of a mobile money innovation on consumption. In our panel sample, adoption of the innovation increased from 43 to 70 percent. We find that, while shocks reduce consumption by 7 percent for nonusers, the consumption of user households is unaffected. The mechanisms underlying these consumption effects are increases in remittances received and the diversity of senders. We report robustness checks supporting these results and use the four-fold expansion of the mobile money agent network as a source of exogenous variation in access to the innovation.Consortium on Financial Systems and Poverty (U.S.
This paper explores patterns of financial transactions at the individual level in order to establish...
Social networks play a vital role in generating social learning and information exchange that can dr...
This paper uses cross-sectional data from the Fin Scope 2020 survey in Rwanda to assess the ...
We explore the impact of reduced transaction costs on risk sharing by estimating the e¤ect of mobile...
Mobile money allows households in Kenya to spread risk more efficiently. In this paper we show that ...
Households in developing countries have gained increased access to remittances through the recent in...
We estimate the effect of mobile money adoption on consumption smoothing, poverty, and human capital...
Using a novel enterprise survey from Kenya (FinAccess Business), we document a strong positive assoc...
Mobile money is a recent innovation that provides financial transaction services via mobile phone, i...
Kenya is depicted as one of the fastest growing mobile money ecosystem in the world. In addition to ...
International audienceThis paper investigates the impact of financial innovations (mobile money) on ...
Texte publié dans la rubrique "Zoom sur la recherche" du site Internet du CERDIAccess to financial s...
In sub-Saharan Africa, financial inclusion remains low, with households being more vulnerable to idi...
A large literature describes how local risk sharing networks can help individuals smooth consumption...
Mobile money is a financial innovation that provides transfers, payments, and other financial servic...
This paper explores patterns of financial transactions at the individual level in order to establish...
Social networks play a vital role in generating social learning and information exchange that can dr...
This paper uses cross-sectional data from the Fin Scope 2020 survey in Rwanda to assess the ...
We explore the impact of reduced transaction costs on risk sharing by estimating the e¤ect of mobile...
Mobile money allows households in Kenya to spread risk more efficiently. In this paper we show that ...
Households in developing countries have gained increased access to remittances through the recent in...
We estimate the effect of mobile money adoption on consumption smoothing, poverty, and human capital...
Using a novel enterprise survey from Kenya (FinAccess Business), we document a strong positive assoc...
Mobile money is a recent innovation that provides financial transaction services via mobile phone, i...
Kenya is depicted as one of the fastest growing mobile money ecosystem in the world. In addition to ...
International audienceThis paper investigates the impact of financial innovations (mobile money) on ...
Texte publié dans la rubrique "Zoom sur la recherche" du site Internet du CERDIAccess to financial s...
In sub-Saharan Africa, financial inclusion remains low, with households being more vulnerable to idi...
A large literature describes how local risk sharing networks can help individuals smooth consumption...
Mobile money is a financial innovation that provides transfers, payments, and other financial servic...
This paper explores patterns of financial transactions at the individual level in order to establish...
Social networks play a vital role in generating social learning and information exchange that can dr...
This paper uses cross-sectional data from the Fin Scope 2020 survey in Rwanda to assess the ...