Frontiers in Big Data (Dec 2024)

How does digitally enabled micro-finance promote income equality for the vulnerable in the expanded BRICS block during the pandemic?

  • Manoj Kumar M. V.,
  • Nasser Almuraqab,
  • Immanuel Azaad Moonesar,
  • Udo Christian Braendle,
  • Ananth Rao,
  • Ananth Rao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fdata.2024.1417752
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7

Abstract

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IntroductionTech-enabled alternative micro-finance promotes income equality in growing BRICS and Austria across financial crises and pandemics. Are financial access and digital skills equally economically valuable? Our study uses inputs: Human Capital, Alternative Micro-finance, Digitization, Governance, and Entrepreneurship, GDP, inflation, population growth, pandemics, and economic crises using the global 2000–2022 to explain income equality using SWIID Gini disposable and market income index as outputs.MethodsThe study uses Principal component analysis for reducing data dimensionality and collinearity. The study uses OLS, Dynamic Mixed Model, and random forest tree, a machine learning technique, as models to model digitally enable micro-finance.ResultsRFT model diagnostics consistently were better than OLS and GMM. Reduced income inequalities resulted from public and private infrastructure investments, government policy interventions to fight pandemics, economic crises, and conflicts, as well as from expansion in GDP.DiscussionThe study concludes that digitally enabled micro-finance plays a crucial role in reducing income inequalities, particularly during times of crisis. Key policy implications include the need for government support in digital infrastructure to enhance financial inclusion. By pooling their resources, the BRICS block can empower micro-finance organizations to ameliorate disruptions from COVID-19 and economic crises.

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