In the developing world, financial practices can be as rudimentary as using cattle for currency or as technologically advanced as transferring money via cell phone.
To help researchers around the globe learn more about how the world's poorest people spend, store and save money, UC Irvine is awarding grants totaling $230,000.
The Institute for Money, Technology & Financial Inclusion has selected 17 projects in 14 countries on such topics as how indigenous craftswomen in Mexico use the Internet to connect with lenders and how rickshaw pullers in India deal with the risk of robbery.
Bill Maurer, UCI anthropology chair and institute director, says the research will help policymakers, scholars, financial firms, banks, mobile phone network providers and information technology companies develop better services and products for the poor abroad and in the U.S.
"These projects will help us understand how the world's poor manage their money and which banking models work best," Maurer says. "Convenient, innovative and inexpensive financial services can change lives in the developing world."
Funded projects include:
Housed in UCI's School of Social Sciences, the Institute for Money, Technology & Financial Inclusion was created in 2008 with a three-year, $1.7 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The institute now is accepting a second round of research proposals on the use of money among the world's poor. Guidelines, deadlines and further details are available at www.imtfi.uci.edu/imtfi_cfp2009.
— Laura Rico, University Communications