Digital financial inclusion and transitory consumption: Household-level evidence from India
Digital financial inclusion and transitory consumption: Household-level evidence from India
Recent developments in FinTech have made financial inclusion a policy priority across the globe. Ex-ante, it is not clear whether the effect of digital financial inclusion on households would be similar to traditional inclusion. Using data from household surveys from India, we explore the relationship between financial inclusion and transitory consumption. Our results suggest that, unlike traditional inclusion, digital financial inclusion is associated with higher transitory consumption. However, when considering the distribution of wealth, we find that the association between transitory consumption and digital financial inclusion is stronger at lower levels of wealth. Finally, we explain this heterogeneous effect of digital and traditional financial inclusion by showing that households with traditional financial inclusion experience a greater reduction in borrowing costs compared to those with digital financial inclusion. The oversensitivity of consumption due to digital inclusion highlights the need for digital literacy and policies aimed at curbing predatory and unfair lending practices.
Borrowing cost, Digital financial inclusion, Household wealth, Traditional financial inclusion, Transitory consumption
Kumar, Abhishek
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Mallick, Sushanta
24be23c0-3cb6-44b2-8255-f9204b17d06d
Sinha, Apra
aa6edbe8-5152-43b3-bf9e-cb191daf7825
31 March 2026
Kumar, Abhishek
bf1591a0-5a8b-40ae-a3b3-6a4ef990564e
Mallick, Sushanta
24be23c0-3cb6-44b2-8255-f9204b17d06d
Sinha, Apra
aa6edbe8-5152-43b3-bf9e-cb191daf7825
Kumar, Abhishek, Mallick, Sushanta and Sinha, Apra
(2026)
Digital financial inclusion and transitory consumption: Household-level evidence from India.
World Development, 204, [107377].
(doi:10.1016/j.worlddev.2026.107377).
Abstract
Recent developments in FinTech have made financial inclusion a policy priority across the globe. Ex-ante, it is not clear whether the effect of digital financial inclusion on households would be similar to traditional inclusion. Using data from household surveys from India, we explore the relationship between financial inclusion and transitory consumption. Our results suggest that, unlike traditional inclusion, digital financial inclusion is associated with higher transitory consumption. However, when considering the distribution of wealth, we find that the association between transitory consumption and digital financial inclusion is stronger at lower levels of wealth. Finally, we explain this heterogeneous effect of digital and traditional financial inclusion by showing that households with traditional financial inclusion experience a greater reduction in borrowing costs compared to those with digital financial inclusion. The oversensitivity of consumption due to digital inclusion highlights the need for digital literacy and policies aimed at curbing predatory and unfair lending practices.
Text
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 2 March 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 March 2026
Published date: 31 March 2026
Keywords:
Borrowing cost, Digital financial inclusion, Household wealth, Traditional financial inclusion, Transitory consumption
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 510688
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510688
ISSN: 0305-750X
PURE UUID: 5d132fb4-2485-4453-816e-674a59b026f0
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Date deposited: 16 Apr 2026 16:42
Last modified: 17 Apr 2026 02:08
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Contributors
Author:
Abhishek Kumar
Author:
Sushanta Mallick
Author:
Apra Sinha
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