Prepaid cards and the unbanked in the U.S.: financial innovations and financial inclusion

Author:

Hikkaduwa Epa Liyanage Kumuditha,Hartarska Valentina,Nadolnyak Denis

Abstract

Purpose Financial inclusion is measured by the number of people who use the formal financial system and banks in particular. Limited access to formal banking services and the existence of unbanked households is a main policy concern. The authors evaluate how the use of prepaid (reloadable) debit cards by unbanked households affects financial inclusion and specifically the potential for these households to participate in the formal financial system and open a bank account. Design/methodology/approach The authors apply matching models to analyze survey data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation National Survey of the Unbanked and Underbanked Households from 2009 to 2019 and evaluate how prepaid cards use affects plans to open a bank account. Findings Unbanked households who use prepaid cards are 5% less likely to open a bank account compared to the matched nonusers of prepaid cards. In addition, prepaid card users are 12% more likely to use nonbanks to transfer money/transact online and 18% more likely to have obtained loans from alternative financial services providers compared to the matched unbanked nonusers of prepaid debit cards. Originality/value No previous work has estimated the causal impact of use of prepaid cards on financial inclusion.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Finance

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