Viewpoints

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PERSPECTIVES ON DIGITAL CURRENCY

Apr 12, 2012

Joe Saunders

From Under the Mattress and Into a Bank: Increasing Financial Access for Women in Nigeria

Provisions seller in Nigeria

Today, Visa’s Chairman and CEO, Joe Saunders, joined with the President and CEO of Women’s World Banking to announce that our two organizations are partnering to advance financial inclusion for women in Nigeria. As part of the announcement, they shared their perspectives in an editorial in the Huffington Post about how financial inclusion can help transform the lives of women in emerging markets.

Nearly 2.5 billion people – almost half the world’s adult population – do not have access to formal financial services. Without basic payments and savings accounts, money often is kept in cash under the mattress then moved around from person to person, drastically increasing the risk of theft or loss. Even a task as simple as paying a bill – in person and via cash – can be unsafe, costly and time-consuming. The implications of this financial exclusion are significant and far-reaching, reinforcing the cycle of poverty and slowing economic progress.

In emerging economies around the world, this can be a particular challenge for women. In Nigeria, for example, nearly 77 percent of women lack access to financial services.  Yet, they often serve as the primary financial managers in most families, expected to stretch meager and irregular incomes to meet daily household needs, not to mention long-term budgeting for life’s unexpected shocks.

The initiative in Nigeria that was announced today will help provide women there with an opportunity to become economically and socially empowered through access to a savings account.

Read more about the Visa and Women’s World Banking initiative.

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Posted by: Douglas Sabo, Visa Corporate Responsibility on April 12, 2012 at 7:31 am

May 21, 2010

Making Sure Our Perspective Is Clearly Understood: An Op-Ed From Joe Saunders

Over the last few days, the entire payments industry has been working tirelessly to make it clear to the public the huge mistake that is the amendment introduced by Senator Durbin to the financial regulatory reform bill. Our views on the negative impact of this amendment are summarized in an op-ed from Joe Saunders that was published by Politico on Friday.

In it, and not surprisingly, we argue for the removal of the amendment from the financial regulatory reform bill. In addition to highlighting the benefits of electronic payments and why interchange is necessary, it calls out the amendment for what it really is: a last minute addition promoted by a group of mega-retailers that want all the benefits, safety and convenience of electronic payments, but don’t want to pay for it (and instead would prefer to shift that burden to their customers). They hired lobbyists and slipped this past Senators who were aiming to pass a bill that would protect consumers. We now need to fix it.

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Posted by: Will Valentine, Visa Corporate Relations on May 21, 2010 at 5:28 pm