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AFI MEMBER SERIES THE PHILIPPINES
KEY LESSONS AND FUTURE OUTLOOK
Inclusion, when pursued together with learning and empowerment through education and protection, will enable the public to truly reap the benefits promised by increased access to and usage of financial products and services, particularly in the context of digital innovations.
KEY LESSONS
PROMOTING MULTI-STAKEHOLDER COORDINATION Expanding financial inclusion is a long-term objective that requires broad-based participation and sustained, and focused efforts by different stakeholders because the challenges go beyond the financial system regulators. The NSFI facilitates a whole-of-society approach in achieving the shared vision of financial inclusion. Its implementation requires strong leadership and ownership of reforms, and widespread political will.
There are important lessons learned from our journey to bring the unserved and underserved segments of the population into the formal financial system: ESTABLISHING AN ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR FINANCIAL INCLUSION Regulators should create an enabling policy and regulatory environment for financial inclusion. For an environment to be enabling, proportionate and appropriate regulations should be in place that do not unnecessarily restrict and at the same time, ensure safe, sound, and responsible operations. It is in this type of environment where market-based innovations thrive. Keeping an open mind to innovations and engaging with players to fully understand business models and their attendant risks are crucial. With the speed of innovations, it is also important to ensure that regulations can be future-proof as much as possible. Clarity in regulations is key so that supervised institutions are able to appreciate the regulatory intent of policy issuances. Regulations should create a level playing field and promote healthy competition among different providers. Proper incentive structures may be provided but not at the expense of distorting market conditions. RECOGNIZING THE I-SIP LINKAGES AND ROLE OF DATA IN POLICYMAKING In policymaking, we look at the interrelationship of financial inclusion with other policy objectives, such as financial stability, financial integrity, and financial consumer protection (or the so-called I-SIP objectives), in order to optimize their linkages and avoid unintended consequences. Evidence must be gathered to guide the policymaking process. A robust data framework for financial inclusion will help policymakers make better-informed decisions. We should constantly challenge ourselves and prove that we are doing the right thing as far as financial inclusion is concerned. Both supply-side and demand-side data play a critical role in this exercise. While we are championing financial inclusion, it is also important to have some sort of healthy skepticism that will allow us to relentlessly test our claims. COMPLEMENTING FINANCIAL INCLUSION WITH FINANCIAL EDUCATION AND CONSUMER PROTECTION Pursuing financial inclusion requires ensuring the public, especially new participants in the financial system, are equipped with the necessary knowledge, skills, tools, and mechanisms so that they are adequately informed and protected. Thus, we make sure that our work on financial inclusion is complemented by financial education and consumer protection.
The NSFI also serves as a platform for regulators and other government agencies to harmonize policy approach and synergize efforts to drive digital financial inclusion. Especially for a country like the Philippines, where there are multiple regulators in the financial system (banking, insurance, securities), regulators must coordinate to ensure a common understanding and consistent application of laws, regulations, and guidance. Be it policy issuances or infrastructure investments, critical government initiatives must be identified and worked on to spur innovations. The importance of network effects in the success of digital innovations will necessitate market players to determine the areas for cooperation and competition. Our National Retail Payment System initiative undertakes this kind of coordination with the government and private sector. CHALLENGES AND THE WAY FORWARD As we continue to advance our financial inclusion work, we will need to address a host of issues and challenges to ensure that financial inclusion becomes a reality throughout the Philippines: > Increasing the adoption of formal financial products and services is still a stumbling block, as current usage levels remain low. For example, mobile money account penetration in the Philippines stood at 4.5% in 2017, based on the Global Findex. This figure appears low considering that e-money products have been available since the early 2000s. While there has been growth in e-money accounts, transactions, issuers, and agents, it is not at the rate that the BSP had hoped for. > The low usage of formal financial products and services highlights the importance of further understanding the behavioral dynamics of financial inclusion. While deliberate measures have been undertaken to address the reported barriers, such as insufficient funds, high cost of financial products and services, absence of documentary requirements, distance to financial institutions, and low level of financial literacy and capability, our demand-side survey indicate that people continue to cite these challenges. This is where behavioral finance comes into play. Conventional finance assumes that people are always guided by rational considerations, but a better understanding of