Client: Colombia Bank of International Trade
Duration: 2012-2014
Region: Latin America and the Caribbean
Country: Colombia
Solutions: Economic Growth
While certain areas in Colombia have acceptable levels of banking, many Colombians are still excluded from basic services such as a savings account. In addition to geographic isolation, there are other, more subtle barriers to financial inclusion: local informal economies, low levels of financial education, transaction costs, fees, and many realities and expectations not well understood by the country’s financial institutions.
Today in Colombia, rural people represent only one-third of the total savings accounts in the country. The financial sector also has a relevant problem of inactive savings accounts, particularly among the poorest socioeconomic groups.
Together with select financial institutions and Bancoldex, a state-owned commercial bank dedicated to development, DAI worked to expand the frontier of quality banking services to benefit geographically isolated poor people and micro-entrepreneurs. As with our other access-to-finance projects in Latin America, these savings products and services were tailored and guided by key issues that ensure sustainability: conditions of local markets, context and expectations of local people and businesses, and financial-technical viability.
RELATED CONTENT:
The EU-GCC Dialogue on Economic Diversification II project aims to enhance economic, trade, and investment cooperation between the EU and Gulf regions. By focusing on innovation-driven industries, the project leverages the EU’s expertise to support the Gulf Cooperation Council’s diversification goals.
Read More