Payment Instruments, Finance and Development

Studies the effects of payment technology innovation (mobile money) on entrepreneurship

Abstract

This paper studies the effects of a payment technology innovation (mobile money) on entrepreneurship and economic development in a quantitative dynamic general equilibrium model.In the model mobile money dominates fiat money as a medium of exchange, since it avoids the risk of theft, but comes with electronic transaction costs. We show that entrepreneurs with higher productivity and access to trade credit are more likely to adopt mobile money as a payment instrument vis-a-vis suppliers. Calibrating the stationary equilibrium of the model to match firm-level data from Kenya, we show significant quantitative implications of mobile money for entrepreneurial growth and macroeconomic development.

Citation

Beck, T. H. L., Pamuk, H., Uras, R. B., & Ramrattan, R. (2017). Payment Instruments, Finance and Development. (DFID Working Paper). Tilburg: Tilburg University.

Payment Instruments, Finance and Development

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2017