ABSTRACT This article analyzes how the digital divide affects women's financial inclusion in 36 African countries from 2011 to 2022. Employing the quantile regression estimation technique, the main finding shows that the digital divide severely impedes financial inclusion. The negative finding is robust with respect to the use of women's financial inclusion sub‐indexes and alternative measures of the digital divide. The negative relationship is robust to OLS, Tobit, censored Poisson and truncated negative binomial estimators. Furthermore, we find that income inequality amplifies the negative effect of the digital divide on women's financial inclusion, whereas human capital mitigates the effect of the digital divide and improves women's financial inclusion. Above certain human capital thresholds, the digital divide no longer has a negative impact on the financial inclusion of women. Based on the quantiles, on average, about 10 years of schooling of the population is required to compensate for the unfavourable effect of the digital divide on the financial inclusion of women. Policy implications are discussed.
Asaloko et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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