Financial Literacy and Financial Inclusion: A positivist view of Proprietors of Small and Medium Enterprises in Fort Portal City, Western Uganda

Authors

  • Christine Kobugabe
  • Dr. John Rwakihembo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47672/ajf.1014
Abstract views: 344
PDF downloads: 352

Keywords:

Financial Literacy, Financial Inclusion, SMEs

Abstract

Purpose: The study aimed at examining the relationship between financial literacy and financial inclusion among proprietors of SMEs in Fort portal City, Western Uganda.

Methodology: The study was anchored on a positivist paradigm, adopting cross-sectional and correlational designs. One hundred sixty-five proprietors of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) were purposively selected from 297 proprietors of registered SMEs operating in all Divisions of Fort Portal City in Western Uganda. Data were collected using a structured self-administered questionnaire from the proprietors who formed the unit of inquiry per SME. Pearson correlation and standard regression were used as the primary data analysis techniques.

Findings: The study established that financial literacy is significantly positively associated with financial inclusion. Financial literacy accounted for 28% of the variance in financial inclusion among proprietors of SMEs in Fort Portal City.

Unique contribution to theory, practice, and policy: The study uniquely contributes to financial inclusion literature by providing further evidence on the positive relationship between financial literacy and financial inclusion among proprietors of SMEs in Fort Portal city, Western Uganda. The study findings have supported the financial literacy theory of financial inclusion, which assumes that “financial literacy increases people’s willingness to participate in the formal financial sector.” It was recommended that proprietors of small and medium enterprises orient their strategic decisions towards increasing their financial literacy to improve their financial inclusion.

 

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Christine Kobugabe

Mountains of the Moon University, Uganda

Dr. John Rwakihembo

Mountains of the Moon University, Uganda

References

Aguera, P. (2015). Financial inclusion, growth and poverty reduction. ECAAS Regional Conference. Brazzavile, (March 23, 2022).

Amin, M. (2005), Social Sciences Research: Conception, Methodology, and Analysis. Makerere University Printery, Kampala.

Bire, A. R., Sauw, H. M., & Maria, M. (2019). The effect of financial literacy towards financial inclusion through financial training. International journal of social sciences and humanities, 3(1), 186-192.

Bongomin, G. O. C., Ntayi, J. M., Munene, J. C., & Nabeta, I. N. (2016). Social capital: mediator of financial literacy and financial inclusion in rural Uganda. Review of International Business and Strategy.

Eton, M., Mwosi, F., Okello-Obura, C., Turyehebwa, A., & Uwonda, G. (2021). Financial inclusion and the growth of small medium enterprises in Uganda: empirical evidence from selected districts in Lango sub-region. Journal of Innovation and Entrepreneurship, 10(1), 1-23.

Fornell, C., & Larcker, D. F. (1981). Structural equation models with unobservable variables and measurement error: Algebra and statistics.

Grohmann, A., Klühs, T., & Menkhoff, L. (2018). Does financial literacy improve financial inclusion? Cross country evidence. World Development, 111, 84-96.

Ikart, E. M. (2019). Survey questionnaire survey pretesting method: An evaluation of survey questionnaire via expert reviews technique. Asian Journal of Social Science Studies, 4(2), 1.

John, R., Kamukama, P., Fredrick, D., & Kijjambu, N. (2020). Corporate board size and financial performance of private limited companies in Uganda.

Kadoya, Y., & Khan, M. S. R. (2020). What determines financial literacy in Japan? Journal of Pension Economics & Finance, 19(3), 353-371.

Kasozi, J., & Makina, D. (2021). Analysis of financial literacy and its effects on financial inclusion in Uganda. International Journal of Finance & Banking Studies (2147- 4486), 10(3), 67-83.

Kodongo, O. (2018). Financial regulations, financial literacy, and financial inclusion: Insights from Kenya. Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 54(12), 2851-2873.

Krejcie, R., and Morgan, D. (1970). Determining sample size for research activities. Educational and Psychological Measurement, 30: 607-610.

Lubis, A., Dalimunthe, R., & Situmeang, C. (2019). Antecedents Effect of Financial Inclusion for the People of North Sumatera. Budapest International Research and Critics Institute-Journal (BIRCI-Journal) Vol, 2(4), 401-408.

Lyons, A. C., & Kass-Hanna, J. (2021). Financial inclusion, financial literacy and economically vulnerable populations in the Middle East and North Africa. Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 57(9), 2699-2738.

Morgan, P. J., & Long, T. Q. (2020). Financial literacy, financial inclusion, and savings behavior in Laos. Journal of Asian Economics, 68, 101197.

Morgan, P., & Pontines, V. (2014). Financial stability and financial inclusion.

Nicolini, G., & Haupt, M. (2019). The assessment of financial literacy: New evidence from Europe. International Journal of Financial Studies, 7(3), 54.

Ozili, P. K. (2020). Social inclusion and financial inclusion: international evidence. International Journal of Development Issues.

Ozili, P. K. (2020). Theories of financial inclusion. In Uncertainty and Challenges in Contemporary Economic Behaviour. Emerald Publishing Limited.

Ozili, P. K. (2021, October). Financial inclusion research around the world: A review. In Forum for social economics (Vol. 50, No. 4, pp. 457-479). Routledge.

Pallant, J. (2020). SPSS survival manual: A step-by-step guide to data analysis using IBM SPSS. Routledge.

Park, Y. S., Konge, L., & Artino, A. R. (2020). The positivism paradigm of research. Academic Medicine, 95(5), 690-694.

Prete, A. L. (2013). Economic literacy, inequality, and financial development. Economics Letters, 118(1), 74-https://doi.org/10.1016/j.econlet.

Ramakrishnan, D. R. (2012, June). Financial literacy and financial inclusion. In 13th Thinkers and writers Forum.

Sanderson, A., Mutandwa, L., & Le Roux, P. (2018). A review of determinants of financial inclusion. International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues, 8(3), 1.

Sanistasya, P. A., Raharjo, K., & Iqbal, M. (2019). The Effect of Financial Literacy and Financial Inclusion on Small Enterprises Performance in East Kalimantan. Journal Economia, 15(1), 48-59.

Shen, Y., Hu, W., & Hueng, C. J. (2018). The effects of financial literacy, digital financial product usage and internet usage on financial inclusion in China. In MATEC Web of Conferences (Vol. 228, p. 05012). EDP Sciences.

Simms, L. J., Zelazny, K., Williams, T. F., & Bernstein, L. (2019). Does the number of response- options matter? Psychometric perspectives using personality questionnaire data. Psychological assessment, 31(4), 557.

Singh, U. (2014). Financial Literacy and Financial Stability are two aspects of Efficient Economy. Journal of Finance, Accounting & Management, 5(2).

Świecka, B., Grzesiuk, A., Korczak, D., & Wyszkowska-Kaniewska, O. (2019). Financial literacy and financial education. De Gruyter Oldenbourg.

Taherdoost, H. (2019). What is the best response scale for survey and questionnaire design; review of different lengths of rating scale/attitude scale/Likert scale. Hamed Taherdoost,1-10.

Uganda Bureau of Statistics Report (2017)

Uganda Investment Authority (UIA) (2019). Annual investment abstract, FY 2018/2019

United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF) Uganda Business Impact Survey, 2020.

World Bank (2018), “Doing Business 2018, reforming to create job,” A World Bank Group Flagship Report

Downloads

Published

2022-05-04

How to Cite

Kobugabe, C. ., & Rwakihembo, J. . (2022). Financial Literacy and Financial Inclusion: A positivist view of Proprietors of Small and Medium Enterprises in Fort Portal City, Western Uganda. American Journal of Finance, 7(2), 1 - 12. https://doi.org/10.47672/ajf.1014

Issue

Section

Articles