21 September 2017
AFI recognized as “a vital accelerator platform for progress on financial inclusion policy” by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
AFI was recognized by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation as a key driving force to advance financial inclusion in developing and emerging countries. AFI’s Maya Commitment platform was cited as a “vital accelerator platform for progress on financial inclusion policy development and implementation.” The recognition came during the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Goalkeepers Accelerators event in New York City, held on the sidelines of the UN Week meetings, on 20 September 2017.
The event convened a community of global leaders and next-generation innovators committed to action, awareness and accountability in reaching the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), with the aim to highlight institutions and projects that have made an impact and are driving progress in the years ahead. Dignitaries speaking at the event included former U.S. President Barak Obama, Prime Minister of Canada Justin Trudeau, Her Majesty Queen Maxima of the Netherlands, Her Majesty Queen Rania of Jordan and numerous celebrity activists.
AFI was represented by Dr. Tukiya Kankasa-Mabula, Deputy Governor of the Bank of Zambia and Chair of AFI’s Gender and Financial Inclusion for Women Committee and Ilya Sverdlov, AFI’s Head of Global Partnerships.
About Goalkeeper Accelerators:
Accelerators are a key part of Goalkeepers. They bring together partners from different sectors around common agendas for action, seeking to catalyze investments, expertise, and innovation to drive further progress towards the SDGs.
Each Accelerator:
This year’s accelerators are investments in supporting women’s movements, advancing digital financial inclusion, fighting child undernutrition and building the capacity of community health worker across countries.
There are different ways for individuals and organizations to get involved in each accelerator from raising awareness to sharing expertise or committing funding.
Almost two billion people live outside the formal financial system — that is, without access to products and services like savings, credit, insurance, and the ability to make and receive electronic payments. This makes it extremely difficult for poor people — especially women — to save for the future, provide for their family’s health and children’s education or invest in a business. Life without access to formal financial services is expensive, time-consuming and unsafe.
Digital financial inclusion benefits everyone in the economy. Moving away from a cash-based system and employing digital services enables: cost savings through increased efficiency and speed; transparency and security by increasing accountability and tracking; and women’s economic empowerment, by giving women more control over their financial lives. Widespread adoption and use of digital finance could increase the GDPs of all emerging economies by 6 percent or a total of $3.7 trillion, by 2025. This additional GDP could create up to 95 million new jobs across all sectors of the economy.
Learn more about Accelerators:
Learn more about #Goalkeepers17:
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