Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household Data

Expanding and stabilizing the middle class is critical for reducing income disparities, promoting social equality, and fostering sustainable economic growth. However, the middle class faces considerable vulnerability, which challenges achieving these goals. Digital inclusive finance, as a transforma...

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Main Authors: Jie Weng, Wang Li, Jie Zhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-06-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251342087
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author Jie Weng
Wang Li
Jie Zhou
author_facet Jie Weng
Wang Li
Jie Zhou
author_sort Jie Weng
collection DOAJ
description Expanding and stabilizing the middle class is critical for reducing income disparities, promoting social equality, and fostering sustainable economic growth. However, the middle class faces considerable vulnerability, which challenges achieving these goals. Digital inclusive finance, as a transformative financial innovation, offers potential solutions to mitigate this vulnerability, yet its role remains insufficiently explored in the existing literature. This study aims to examine the impact of digital inclusive finance on reducing middle-class vulnerability, with a specific focus on its mechanisms and inclusiveness. Using data from the China Family Panel Studies, the analysis employs the Vulnerability as Expected Poverty (VEP) model to quantify middle-class vulnerability and explore the protective effects of digital inclusive finance. The findings demonstrate that digital inclusive finance significantly reduces middle-class vulnerability, a result validated through robustness checks. Mechanism analysis reveals that digital inclusive finance enhances entrepreneurial activities, financial participation, and employment opportunities, collectively contributing to its protective effects. Additionally, the study highlights the inclusive nature of digital finance, as it helps bridge the ‘digital divide’ across regions, urban and rural areas, education levels, and age groups. The findings suggest that policymakers and financial institutions should prioritize expanding access to digital inclusive finance by improving digital infrastructure and financial literacy programs. Targeted initiatives, such as subsidizing digital tools or incentivizing financial innovation, could effectively reduce middle-class vulnerability.
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spelling doaj-art-04fb416b5cf84e29abc10789f772c47a2025-08-20T03:45:31ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402025-06-011510.1177/21582440251342087Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household DataJie Weng0Wang Li1Jie Zhou2Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou, ChinaZhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou, ChinaZhejiang Chinese Medical University, Hangzhou, ChinaExpanding and stabilizing the middle class is critical for reducing income disparities, promoting social equality, and fostering sustainable economic growth. However, the middle class faces considerable vulnerability, which challenges achieving these goals. Digital inclusive finance, as a transformative financial innovation, offers potential solutions to mitigate this vulnerability, yet its role remains insufficiently explored in the existing literature. This study aims to examine the impact of digital inclusive finance on reducing middle-class vulnerability, with a specific focus on its mechanisms and inclusiveness. Using data from the China Family Panel Studies, the analysis employs the Vulnerability as Expected Poverty (VEP) model to quantify middle-class vulnerability and explore the protective effects of digital inclusive finance. The findings demonstrate that digital inclusive finance significantly reduces middle-class vulnerability, a result validated through robustness checks. Mechanism analysis reveals that digital inclusive finance enhances entrepreneurial activities, financial participation, and employment opportunities, collectively contributing to its protective effects. Additionally, the study highlights the inclusive nature of digital finance, as it helps bridge the ‘digital divide’ across regions, urban and rural areas, education levels, and age groups. The findings suggest that policymakers and financial institutions should prioritize expanding access to digital inclusive finance by improving digital infrastructure and financial literacy programs. Targeted initiatives, such as subsidizing digital tools or incentivizing financial innovation, could effectively reduce middle-class vulnerability.https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251342087
spellingShingle Jie Weng
Wang Li
Jie Zhou
Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household Data
SAGE Open
title Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household Data
title_full Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household Data
title_fullStr Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household Data
title_full_unstemmed Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household Data
title_short Can Digital Inclusive Finance Safeguard the Middle Class? A Study Based on Chinese Household Data
title_sort can digital inclusive finance safeguard the middle class a study based on chinese household data
url https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440251342087
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