Design options for a sustainable financial sector: Lessons from inclusive banking experiments

Over 200 years ago, Adam Smith put forward the notion that individuals seeking to benefit themselves through trade were led as if by an invisible hand to a situation in which society as a whole could benefit. It can be argued, however, that social objectives such as sustainability, and inclusiveness, do not emerge spontaneously through market forces. Such outcomes have to be designed through legal structures and institutions. In other words, for the invisible hand to operate, there needs to be a visible hand behind it. The financial inclusion experiment in South Africa provides lessons for the design of the type of financial sector required for the transition from greed to green. "

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Source https://wedocs.unep.org/20.500.11822/9741
Last Updated January 25, 2023, 17:17 (UTC)
Created January 25, 2023, 15:20 (UTC)
GUID 54ae70b6-eb30-4e89-aa94-97721bcf7ece
Issued 2016-10-11T20:15:39Z
Language English
Modified 2022-10-17 18:44:13.048
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Theme Reports, Books and Booklets
data_type document
spatial Kenya