The newest edition of our consumer protection newsletter.
View this email in your browser
[link removed]
[link removed]
More evidence, less poverty
IPA Consumer Protection Quarterly
Issue No. 9 – May 2023
Welcome back to the Consumer Protection Quarterly, IPA's newsletter on the latest consumer protection research across the globe. This newsletter is part of IPA's Consumer Protection Research Initiative
[link removed]
(CPRI). Each quarter we send you the latest research, insights, and inspiration for financial consumer protection. If you have something to share, please reach out:
[email protected]
mailto:
[email protected]?subject=Consumer%20Protection%20Quarterly
.
You are receiving this email because of your past participation in IPA consumer protection or financial inclusion events, and/or because you signed up for our consumer protection practitioner's forum mailing interest list
[link removed]
. If there are others you think may benefit from this newsletter, please forward. You can manage your email preferences here
[link removed]
.
What's New and What's Next
New: Webinars in Finance and Development
From April 11-12, CPRI Director Paul Adams
[link removed]
attended the second Webinars in Finance and Development (#WEFIDEV) workshop at Northwestern University. WEFIDEV
[link removed]
is a regular webinar series for young scholars working on finance topics in low- and middle-income countries. This was their second in-person workshop to present and get feedback on early-stage research. Topics included debt restructuring for minibus drivers in South Africa, the effect of digital payment interoperability on competition in Africa, and CPRI-sponsored research on fraud identification (see webinar below).
New: IPA Study in India Asks if Self-Perception Affects Consumers’ Willingness to Seek Redress
Do internal factors like perceived agency drive differences in consumers’ willingness to seek redress? And could external factors like social norms also affect redressal behavior? In a 2022 study
[link removed]
, researchers Sharon Barnhardt
[link removed]
and Aayush Agarwal
[link removed]
conducted a survey in rural areas of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar in India to examine these questions. Here are five things they found:
There’s no significant correlation between the three psychological traits (locus of control, self-efficacy, and fatalism) and an individual’s likelihood of seeking redressal on their own.
Out of these three traits, men and women only differed regarding the locus of control.
Women have less knowledge of how to resolve digital financial service (DFS) complaints, but that didn’t impact their trust in DFS.
Women and men feel the same about reporting DFS issues.
Household and community norms of retribution for making mistakes influence women’s likelihood of seeking redressal on their own.
As usual, there are still more answers we need to uncover. The next question researchers need to answer is whether agency and confidence prevent women from even using digital financial services in the first place. Read more on the other studies funded by this initiative here
[link removed]
.
New: IPA Study in Uganda Uses Consumer Complaint Data for Targeted Consumer Protection
What if you could use information about past customer complaints to predict who was more susceptible to fraud—and even when they would be targeted? That’s exactly what IPA did in Uganda
[link removed]
with the Uganda Communications Commission (UCC). Researchers Matthew Bird
[link removed]
, Rafe Mazer
[link removed]
, and Kyla Longman
[link removed]
worked with the UCC to implement a standardized complaints categorization template to track and categorize all consumer complaints received by mobile network operators.
But how can you maximize the strength of complaint data for consumer protection? Here’s what the researchers, recommend:
Use complaint data to predict fraud timing and targets.
Complaints logs don’t tell the whole story about customer complaints. Looking at all of the data is key.
Standardize and expand complaints templates.
If we harness the powerful insight these data can provide, we can improve redress channels, better predict fraud targets, and expand financial access. Read more on other CPRI-funded studies here
[link removed]
.
New: New Approaches to Protecting Consumers in Digital Financial Services - Lightning Talk with Paul Adams
On April 26, Paul Adams recently presented a lightning talk on New Approaches to Protecting Consumers in Digital Financial Services
[link removed]
at the Global Digital Development Forum. Paul shared key insights from the first three years of the CPRI, highlighting new consumer protection measures regulators can use, such as analyzing transaction level data and complaints data, conducting mystery shopping, and using machine learning.
New: Can You Spot a Scam? Consumer Protection and Scam Identification in Kenya
On March 23, IPA hosted a webinar
[link removed]
to discuss whether or not people can actually identify scams. And if not, can we use fraud prevention tools to teach people how to identify scams? Researchers Lisa Spantig
[link removed]
, Elif Kubilay
[link removed]
, and Lucy Kaaria
[link removed]
presented their recent findings from a research project in Kenya, in which they study phone scams, develop a novel measure of consumers’ ability to spot them, and measure the effectiveness of scam education. The researchers were joined by Boniface Kamiti
[link removed]
(Competition Authority of Kenya) and William Blackmon
[link removed]
(IPA) to discuss consumer protection in digital financial services in Kenya and how these recent findings can impact local consumers.
New: Funding Opportunities
IPA & Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab's Displaced Livelihoods Initiative
[link removed]
| Optional expressions of interest due by June 2; Proposals due by July 21:
Supports rigorous impact evaluations, pilots, exploratory studies, infrastructure and public goods projects, and scaling work to inform policies and programs on sustainable livelihoods for displaced populations and host communities. Funding for DLI comes from the IKEA Foundation.
Next: Paul Adams at the RegTech Africa Conference
Paul Adams will be speaking at the RegTech Africa Conference
[link removed]
on the topic of Competition and Consumer Protection. Paul will be speaking alongside Dr. Mark Yama Tampuri Jnr, President, Ghana Fintech Academic Network; Jenny Radziwolek, CEO, Regxelerator; Mary Gichuki, Advocacy Manager, GSMA Mobile Money Programme; Sheila Senfuma, Head of Programme, Digital Finance, Consumers International. The session is part of the virtual program at the hybrid conference and takes place on May 24 from 12:20-13:25 (GMT+1).
What We've Been Reading
Report: GSMA Mobile Money State of the Industry Report 2023
[link removed]
| Mobile money has played such an important role in expanding the reach of digital financial services. Read the latest report from GSMA on the state of the industry.
Article: Also on Mobile Money, the second edition of the VoxDevLit on Mobile Money
[link removed]
was released earlier this quarter, as was the second edition of the Microfinance
[link removed]
version. Essential source material for academic research on these topics.
Blog: The Hidden Traps of Deceptive Design: Embedding Consumer Protection into DFS
[link removed]
. The Centre for Financial Inclusion is launching a workstream on ‘Consumer Protection by Design’ to identify and address newer risks that emerge as inclusive finance is digitalized. This is the first blog from that new area of work.
Report: Beyond Reach: Developing a Holistic Measurement of Cash-in/Cash-out Networks
[link removed]
| Economist Impact develops and pilots measures to assess the reach, access, and quality of cash-in/cash-out networks in five countries. We’re proud to see some of our regular Principal Investigators and advisors among those consulted on the project.
Long Read: Women, Risks, And Consumer Protection In Online Lending Platforms In Indonesia
[link removed]
| This report from MicroSave Consulting (MSC) and the Faculty of Social and Political Science, Department of Criminology of the University of Indonesia highlights the main consumer protection risks of online lending for women and its impact on gender-based violence against women.
Did you receive this newsletter from someone else and don’t want to miss out on the next one? Sign up
[link removed]
to be part of our Consumer Protection Practitioner’s Network.
If you’d prefer to not receive these Consumer Protection Quarterly emails in the future, you can manage your email preferences or unsubscribe here
[link removed]
.
DONATE
[link removed]
| RESEARCH
[link removed]
| IMPACT
[link removed]
| WORK WITH IPA
[link removed]
poverty-action.org
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
[link removed]
Sent to
[email protected] by Innovations for Poverty Action (IPA)
Innovations for Poverty Action
1701 Rhode Island Ave NW 4th Floor
Washington, DC 20036
[email protected]
mailto:
[email protected]
Manage Your Email Preferences
[link removed]
| Forward This Email
[link removed]