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USFD and "Financial Inclusion"

by Julie Siwicki of the Financial Access Initiative

“Financial Inclusion” has been a long-standing goal in development policy circles, borne at least in part out of the microfinance revolution. Belatedly, wealthier countries like the United States have caught on to the need to pay attention to whether households are included in the formal financial system. But a shared and precise definition of what it means to be included, or excluded, remains difficult to come by.

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New Report on "Invisible Finance"

by U.S. Financial Diaries

People run their financial lives with a variety of tools. The first tools that come to mind are likely to be formal, like checking accounts and credit cards. But households often use informal tools that are harder to see from outside, like short-term loans from friends or relatives. Some people use informal financial services because they lack access—or believe they lack access—to quality products or because they do not trust formal options...

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Should Your Post Office Be A Bank?

by Julie Siwicki of the Financial Access Initiative

Last month brought a flurry of opinions on postal banking in response to a new proposal that the US Post Office offer financial services – including bill-pay, check cashing, even small loans – to the “financially underserved.” Reactions have ranged from enthusiastic to deeply skeptical. This post highlights two key questions that have been posed and synthesizes some of the answers offered up so far...

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Who Needs Payday Loans?

by Laura Freschi of the Financial Access Initiative

There’s a nice post on payday loans by New School professor Lisa Servon on the New Yorker Currency blog this week. She tells the story of Azlinah Tambu, a single mother in Oakland, CA who took out a series of payday loans, knowing she wouldn’t be able to pay them back on time and will end up repaying far more than she borrows. There’s no question Tambu is as informed a consumer of these types of loans as you could find: she has worked as a teller for a payday lender. In relating Tambu’s struggle to repay, Servon makes two really important and related points...

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Overdraft as a Product, not a Penalty?

by Julie Siwicki of the Financial Access Initiative

The Taylors overdraft their checking account every two weeks, on purpose.

As described in a recent issue brief published by the U.S. Financial Diaries, the Taylor family’s income level varies significantly from month to month. Sometimes it’s not enough to cover all of their expenses. So, they opened an account at a bank with a simple overdraft fee structure: One $35 charge per overdraft, no daily fees, and an allowance of up to $500 at a time. Since the Taylors typically make only one large cash withdrawal per paycheck – the entire amount of pay – this bank would charge them at most one $35 overdraft fee each cycle, if they happen to need more cash than the amount of that week’s direct deposit...

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