Digital finance helps to channel more resources toward all of the SDGs, albeit through different pathways. Goals in areas such as sustainable infrastructure, energy, water, transport, and financial services, are more easily financialized because they have paying users. Digitalization helps direct existing public and private investments but also empowers individuals to invest in sustainable infrastructure and utility services by reducing information gaps.
Digitalization allows transaction visibility and traceability of production, employment, and business conditions related to economic SDGs, such as decent work, manufacturing, agribusiness, sustainable production and consumption. Such transparency, coupled with lower cost of services delivered through digital platforms, supports expanded provision of affordable and tailored financial services. Digitalization also supports unconventional mechanisms for financing economic activities that bypass the traditional financial system, such as crowdfunding or (community) crypto-currencies and facilitate sustainable consumer purchases.
Digital financing can target reduction in the negative effects of global consumption and production patterns on environmental SDGs. Satellites, sensors, publicly available scientific data and ESG disclosure help capture and integrate information about climate change, biodiversity loss, pollution and disaster risks into financing decisions, for example via green securities and sustainable robo-advisors. Digital platforms support carbon markets, which grew fivefold between 2017 and 2019, reaching US$215 billion. Objective, automated verification through data tokens can support scaling of carbon trading.
Progress on social SDGs hinges to a large extent on the ability to effectively manage public financing and assess performance of institutions. Digitalization improves availability of data on public services and citizens’ ability to review and demand accountability. Digital finance reduces remittance and e-transfer costs and enables e-service provision. It also supports innovations such as gender lens investing, P2P international giving, micro-insurance, or bias-detecting algorithms. Analysis of macro level data shows that access to mobile phones is positively associated with multiple indicators linked to social development, such as lower gender inequalities, enhanced contraceptive use, and lower maternal and child mortality.
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Cheaper Intermediation
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Findings: Reduced Transaction and Intermediation Costs
Findings: Innovative Business Models















