This book is unique in that it challenges scholarly views on financial
inclusion and poverty reduction while also relating financial inclusion
and poverty reduction to the Fourth Industrial Revolution. The book
deviates from the usual method of analyzing financial inclusion, which
relies on bank accounts or microcredit as success criteria, and instead
discusses how the Fourth Industrial Revolution is facilitating digital
financial inclusion. With a five-fold goal, this book investigates both
past and present readings and understandings of poverty and financial
inclusion. To begin, it provides a thorough introduction to the Fourth
Industrial Revolution and financial inclusion in the context of the
Fourth Industrial Revolution. Second, the book dives quite extensively
into the theories of financial inclusion in the context of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution. Third, the book reconstructs the theory of
financial inclusion, moving from traditional to digital financial
inclusion, highlighting the role of digital financial inclusion in the
transition from an informal financial money market to a formal financial
system. The fourth goal is to evaluate the tools and effects of digital
financial inclusion on poverty. Finally, it provides case studies of
digital financial inclusion and the future of digital financial
inclusion in emerging and developing countries. This book will be of
interest to academics, students and practitioners in a range of
disciplines, including finance, development economics, and consumer
economics.