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Financial technology to address the liability of poorness? A typology of FinTech organisations

1 Citations2022
Nadeera Ranabahu
European Journal of Innovation Management

A typology is developed which highlights strategies pro-poor FinTechs use and explains the types of entrepreneurial support innovative organisations provide for their customers and contributes to enhanced financial inclusion and entrepreneurial promotion amongst the poor.

Abstract

PurposeThis paper explores how financial technology (FinTech) organisations address poverty-related challenges when providing digital financial services. Employing the conceptual foundation of the liability of poorness (i.e. literacy gaps, a scarcity mindset, intense non-business pressures and a lack of financial slack), this paper explores the innovative strategies that FinTechs use to address these liabilities and promote entrepreneurship.Design/methodology/approachThe paper uses detailed case data collected from three FinTech organisations operating in one South Asian country.FindingsFinTech organisations' innovative strategies reflect a combination of “high touch” (human) vs “low touch” (digital) solutions. All the organisations simplified internal systems or procedures to accommodate customers. The degree to which the three organisations adopted each of the identified strategies shows an emerging typology of FinTechs; that is, innovators with high digital interactions, a mix of digital-human interactions and high human interactions.Research limitations/implicationsThe paper develops a typology which categorises FinTech innovative strategies. The typology highlights strategies pro-poor FinTechs use and explains the types of entrepreneurial support innovative organisations provide for their customers. Both the typology and the innovative strategies contribute to enhanced financial inclusion and entrepreneurial promotion amongst the poor.Originality/valueThe originality of the paper comes from its focus on FinTechs' innovative pro-poor strategies. Existing studies typically address the technology-side of innovations. In contrast, this paper combines innovative strategies with the liability of poorness to identify issues associated with financial inclusion.