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Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion

Differences in languages spoken within a population can be thought of as transaction costs that make economic activities more difficult. This perspective has motivated a host of academic literature analyzing the linguistic profile of countries in relation to different socio-economic variables. Among...

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Main Author: Wolf, Matthew Christopher
Other Authors: Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Wolf, Matthew Christopher
author2 Alhassan, Abdul Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Wolf, Matthew Christopher
author_facet Alhassan, Abdul Latif
Wolf, Matthew Christopher
author_sort Wolf, Matthew Christopher
collection Thesis
description Differences in languages spoken within a population can be thought of as transaction costs that make economic activities more difficult. This perspective has motivated a host of academic literature analyzing the linguistic profile of countries in relation to different socio-economic variables. Among these studies, financial inclusion is rarely one of the variables of interest. Language and financial inclusion are sometimes analyzed together in more granular studies of a single country, or even of individuals, but never in a cross-sectional, country-level analysis. However economic growth, which is generally considered to be positively related to financial inclusion, has frequently been studied, with mixed results. Earlier researchers of the question identified negative relationships between economic growth and linguistic diversity, in what became known as the “Fishman-Pool Hypothesis”. Later researchers determined that such a relationship did not exist, or that, in certain contexts, linguistic diversity and economic growth could even be positively related. This study departs from the intuition that financial inclusion's relationship to linguistic diversity may parallel that of economic growth – a relationship that seems intuitively negative but is more ambiguous after analysis. To overcome the broad interpretability of the concepts of interest, this study constructed two dependent variables representing financial inclusion, and four independent variables representing linguistic diversity with cross-sectional data for a sample of 61 countries. The models were estimated by accounting for multicollinearity of the regressors, as well as heteroskedasticity and non-normality in the error terms using the Seemingly Unrelated Regressions models and ordinary least squares estimation techniques. The results indicate that linguistic diversity indicators were all nearly zero, and highly insignificant, despite the strong specification of the models. This suggests that linguistic diversity has no significant relationship – positive or negative – to financial inclusion at a country level. This result was consistent across all the possible combinations of the operationalized variables for both concepts.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:25.395Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33981 Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion Wolf, Matthew Christopher Alhassan, Abdul Latif business Differences in languages spoken within a population can be thought of as transaction costs that make economic activities more difficult. This perspective has motivated a host of academic literature analyzing the linguistic profile of countries in relation to different socio-economic variables. Among these studies, financial inclusion is rarely one of the variables of interest. Language and financial inclusion are sometimes analyzed together in more granular studies of a single country, or even of individuals, but never in a cross-sectional, country-level analysis. However economic growth, which is generally considered to be positively related to financial inclusion, has frequently been studied, with mixed results. Earlier researchers of the question identified negative relationships between economic growth and linguistic diversity, in what became known as the “Fishman-Pool Hypothesis”. Later researchers determined that such a relationship did not exist, or that, in certain contexts, linguistic diversity and economic growth could even be positively related. This study departs from the intuition that financial inclusion's relationship to linguistic diversity may parallel that of economic growth – a relationship that seems intuitively negative but is more ambiguous after analysis. To overcome the broad interpretability of the concepts of interest, this study constructed two dependent variables representing financial inclusion, and four independent variables representing linguistic diversity with cross-sectional data for a sample of 61 countries. The models were estimated by accounting for multicollinearity of the regressors, as well as heteroskedasticity and non-normality in the error terms using the Seemingly Unrelated Regressions models and ordinary least squares estimation techniques. The results indicate that linguistic diversity indicators were all nearly zero, and highly insignificant, despite the strong specification of the models. This suggests that linguistic diversity has no significant relationship – positive or negative – to financial inclusion at a country level. This result was consistent across all the possible combinations of the operationalized variables for both concepts. 2021-09-20T17:38:14Z 2021-09-20T17:38:14Z 2020 2021-09-20T17:37:48Z Master Thesis Masters MBA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33981 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle business
Wolf, Matthew Christopher
Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion
title_full Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion
title_fullStr Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion
title_full_unstemmed Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion
title_short Money talks: investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion
title_sort money talks investigating the relationship between linguistic diversity and financial inclusion
topic business
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33981
work_keys_str_mv AT wolfmatthewchristopher moneytalksinvestigatingtherelationshipbetweenlinguisticdiversityandfinancialinclusion