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Purpose – The main purpose of this study is to test for the interaction effect of digital literacy in the
relationship between financial technologies (FinTechs) of biometrics and mobile money and digital financial
inclusion among the unbanked poor women, youth and persons with disabilities (PWDs) in rural Uganda.
Design/methodology/approach – Covariance-based structural equation modeling was used to construct
the interaction effect using data collected from the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs located in the four
regions in Uganda as prescribed by Hair et al. (2022).
Findings – The findings from this study are threefold: first; the results revealed a positive interaction effect of
digital literacy between FinTechs of biometrics and mobile money and digital financial inclusion. Second; the
results also confirmed that biometrics identification positively promotes digital financial inclusion. Lastly; the
results showed that mobile money positively promotes digital financial inclusion. A combination of FinTechs
of biometrics and mobile money together with digital literacy explain 29% variation in digital financial
inclusion among the unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs in rural Uganda.
Research limitations/implications – The data for this study were collected mainly from the unbanked
poor women, youth and PWDs. Further studies may look at data from other sections of the vulnerable
population in under developed financial markets. Additionally, the data for this study were collected only from
Uganda as a developing country. Thus, more data may be obtained from other developing countries to draw
conclusive and generalized empirical evidence. Besides, the current study used cross sectional design to collect
the data. Therefore, future studies may adopt longitudinal research design to investigate the impact of
FinTechs on digital financial inclusion in the presence of digital literacy across different time range.
Practical implications – The governments in developing countries like Uganda should support women, youth,
PWDs and other equally vulnerable groups, especially in the rural communities to understand and use FinTechs.
This can be achieved through digital literacy that can help them to embrace digital financial services and competently
navigate and perform digital transactions over digital platforms like mobile money without making errors. Besides,
governments in developing countries like Uganda can use this finding to advocate for the design of appropriate
digital infrastructures to reach remote areas and ensure “last mile connectivity for digital financial services’ users.”
The use of off-line solutions can complement the absence or loss of on-line network connectivity for biometrics and
mobile money to close the huge digital divide gap in rural areas. This can scale-up access to and use of financial
services by the unbanked rural population.
Originality/value – This paper sheds more light on the importance of digital literacy in the ever complex and
dynamic global FinTech ecosystem in the presence of rampant cyber risks. To the best of the authors’
knowledge, limited studies currently exist that integrate digital literacy as a moderator in the relationship
between FinTechs and digital financial inclusion, especially among vulnerable groups in under-developed
digital financial markets in developing countries. This is the novelty of the paper with data obtained from the
unbanked poor women, youth and PWDs in rural Uganda. |
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