10% gender gap in Jan Dhan accounts: study

In news:

  • The World Bank’s policy research working paper ‘Making It Easier to Apply for a Bank Account: A Study of the Indian Market’ (2017).
  • The paper explored the costs of opening an account, the efficiency of the account application process, and demographic differences between those who choose to apply and those who do not.
  • A World Bank paper has noted a 10% gender gap in opening accounts under the country’s flagship financial inclusion programme — Jan Dhan Yojana — with 73 % men applying for accounts against 63 % women.
  • Madhya Pradesh recorded the largest gender gap of 21%.

Key Facts:

  • It also noted an income gap — 64% being poorer adults and 71 % richer adults — in applying for an account.
  • The share of wage earners (72%) was higher than the share of adults who are out of the workforce and applied for an account (64%).
  • Among adults with primary school education, 62% applied as compared with 70% of adults who had completed secondary school education (and 84 % of adults with a graduate degree).

Why account opening is a tedious task in India?

  • People who wished to apply for an account continued to incur a range of costs, including the cost of travelling to bank branches, the cost of collecting documentation and various other monetary costs.
  • Some adults declined to get an account as they were unable to afford the fees for maintaining and using an account, or think the fees are not worth it
  • Yet 40 % of adults cited lack of trust in financial institutions as reason for not opening an account.

 

THE HINDU

Posted by Jawwad Kazi on 7th Jan 2018