This study examines the relationship between financial inclusion and economic development in the rural areas of Udaipur Division (Rajasthan, India). Using a mixed-methods approach that combines household survey data, official secondary statistics, and qualitative interviews with key informants (bank officials, local entrepreneurs, and community leaders), the paper investigates how access to and usage of formal financial services influence indicators of rural economic development: income diversification, agricultural productivity, savings behaviour, microenterprise growth, and resilience to income shocks. The analysis constructs a composite Financial Inclusion Index (covering access, usage and quality) and employs regression models to estimate the effect of financial inclusion on household-level and village-level development outcomes, controlling for socio-demographic and infrastructure variables. Qualitative evidence is used to explicate causal pathways—credit access for productive investment, digital payment adoption for transaction efficiency, and insurance for income stabilization. Results indicate that greater depth of financial inclusion is associated with higher household incomes, increased non-farm enterprise activity, and improved capacity to cope with shocks; however, heterogeneity exists across caste, gender and remoteness, and digital access alone is insufficient without parallel efforts in financial literacy and trust-building. The paper concludes by offering policy recommendations targeted at last-mile banking infrastructure, context-sensitive digital literacy programs, and locally tailored credit products that can amplify the developmental gains of inclusion in Udaipur Division and similar rural settings.
Dak et al. (Sun,) studied this question.