The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable development

Purpose: This study examines whether institutional quality is an effective transmission channel between digital financial literacy and financial inclusion in African economies, with implications for sustainable development goals related to poverty reduction and economic inclusion. Methodology: Th...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tochukwu Timothy Okoli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre of Sociological Research 2025-06-01
Series:Economics, Management and Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jems.sciview.net/index.php/jems/article/view/219
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849727096795955200
author Tochukwu Timothy Okoli
author_facet Tochukwu Timothy Okoli
author_sort Tochukwu Timothy Okoli
collection DOAJ
description Purpose: This study examines whether institutional quality is an effective transmission channel between digital financial literacy and financial inclusion in African economies, with implications for sustainable development goals related to poverty reduction and economic inclusion. Methodology: The research employs principal component analysis to construct a financial inclusion index and applies system Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimation techniques to analyze panel data from 41 African economies (7 emerging, 26 frontiers, and 8 fragile) from 2004 to 2022. Results: Financial inclusion in Africa is more responsive to access indicators (ATMs and internet banking) than penetration and usage indicators. While the direct impacts of digital finance and institutional quality on financial inclusion show ambiguous results, their interaction demonstrates a significant positive effect, indicating that institutional quality successfully moderates digital finance's impact on financial inclusion. Theoretical Contribution: The study extends existing financial inclusion theory by identifying institutional quality as a critical transmission mechanism that can transform potentially negative effects of digital finance into positive outcomes for financial inclusion in developing economies. Practical Implications: Findings suggest that African policymakers should prioritize institutional development alongside digital financial education to effectively leverage digital finance for inclusive growth, supporting sustainable development goals for reducing inequality and promoting economic participation. Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): SDG 1: No Poverty; SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth; SDG 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure; SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities
format Article
id doaj-art-6432746dba974f11b6c22d865d26d050
institution DOAJ
issn 2520-6303
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Centre of Sociological Research
record_format Article
series Economics, Management and Sustainability
spelling doaj-art-6432746dba974f11b6c22d865d26d0502025-08-20T03:09:57ZengCentre of Sociological ResearchEconomics, Management and Sustainability2520-63032025-06-0110110.14254/jems.2025.10-1.5The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable developmentTochukwu Timothy Okoli0Department of Taxation, College of Accounting, University of South Africa (UNISA), South Africa Purpose: This study examines whether institutional quality is an effective transmission channel between digital financial literacy and financial inclusion in African economies, with implications for sustainable development goals related to poverty reduction and economic inclusion. Methodology: The research employs principal component analysis to construct a financial inclusion index and applies system Generalized Method of Moments (GMM) estimation techniques to analyze panel data from 41 African economies (7 emerging, 26 frontiers, and 8 fragile) from 2004 to 2022. Results: Financial inclusion in Africa is more responsive to access indicators (ATMs and internet banking) than penetration and usage indicators. While the direct impacts of digital finance and institutional quality on financial inclusion show ambiguous results, their interaction demonstrates a significant positive effect, indicating that institutional quality successfully moderates digital finance's impact on financial inclusion. Theoretical Contribution: The study extends existing financial inclusion theory by identifying institutional quality as a critical transmission mechanism that can transform potentially negative effects of digital finance into positive outcomes for financial inclusion in developing economies. Practical Implications: Findings suggest that African policymakers should prioritize institutional development alongside digital financial education to effectively leverage digital finance for inclusive growth, supporting sustainable development goals for reducing inequality and promoting economic participation. Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): SDG 1: No Poverty; SDG 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth; SDG 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure; SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities https://jems.sciview.net/index.php/jems/article/view/219Financial inclusionDigital financeInstitutional QualityAfrican economiesGMM
spellingShingle Tochukwu Timothy Okoli
The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable development
Economics, Management and Sustainability
Financial inclusion
Digital finance
Institutional Quality
African economies
GMM
title The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable development
title_full The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable development
title_fullStr The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable development
title_full_unstemmed The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable development
title_short The relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion: Evidence from African economies and implications for sustainable development
title_sort relevance of institutional quality as a transmission channel for digital financial inclusion evidence from african economies and implications for sustainable development
topic Financial inclusion
Digital finance
Institutional Quality
African economies
GMM
url https://jems.sciview.net/index.php/jems/article/view/219
work_keys_str_mv AT tochukwutimothyokoli therelevanceofinstitutionalqualityasatransmissionchannelfordigitalfinancialinclusionevidencefromafricaneconomiesandimplicationsforsustainabledevelopment
AT tochukwutimothyokoli relevanceofinstitutionalqualityasatransmissionchannelfordigitalfinancialinclusionevidencefromafricaneconomiesandimplicationsforsustainabledevelopment