Institute for Research on Economics and Society – Faculty of Economics and Business – University of Indonesia

Toward Higher Financial Inclusion Rate: Service Quality, Costs of Access, and Awareness

June 12

Abstract

The inclusion level of DFS and Laku Pandai (inclusion of access or use of services) has reached 28% and 43%. Nevertheless, when we define the inclusion by account ownership (inclusion of banking account), the inclusion rates drop to 5% and 25%. The lack of awareness of DFS and Laku Pandai is still considered as the major obstacle to broadening the access of financial services through agents. Laku Pandai appears more reliable in improving ?financial service access for the poor and people in remote areas as it may provide a more efficient access (in terms of cost, distance, and time of transport) and perceived by users to provide better service quality than other formal ?financial services they have experienced thus far. On the other hand, DFS services seem to be more attractive toward more educated and higher income segments of society. Nevertheless, the cost of access of DFS is not much different from the cost of access of banks and other formal financial services while the quality is perceived to be less by its users. Furthermore, the efficiency of both DFS and Laku Pandai could be much improved since there is a significant overcharging in their service fees. On the account ownership, there is an indication that DFS is not a preferable financial access for people who are excluded from formal financial services while it is for Laku Pandai. The regression results also show that users of both DFS and Laku Pandai need time to open or to register an account, possibly due to the time needed to build in trust in the agents. Another factor that is important in determining whether a user is to open an account is the (perceived) cost. Therefore, the mentioned service fee overcharging should be taken seriously to improve the rate of opening or registering accounts.

 

Download (PDF, 874KB)

Latest Publications

MSME Resilience in the Face of COVID-19 and Beyond: A Meta-Analysis of Factors that Influence MSME Resilience

April 14, 2025

Monthly Inflation, April 2025 : Macroeconomic Analysis Series

April 10, 2025

Indonesia’s Employment Risks in the Shadow of US Reciprocal Tariffs – Labor Market Brief, April 2025

April 10, 2025

Potential Impact of US Trade War and Implications for Indonesia

April 7, 2025

Related Publications

Indonesian MSMEs

MSME Resilience in the Face of COVID-19 and Beyond: A Meta-Analysis of Factors that Influence MSME Resilience

energy transition

Employment Impacts of Energy Transition in Indonesia

Indonesia's Decarbonization

Indonesia's Decarbonization Plans Diagnostic: A Policy Paper

Positive SSL Wildcard