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Bridging Sustainability and Inclusion: Financial Access in the Environmental, Social, and Governance Landscape

Carlo Drago, Alberto Costantiello, Massimo Arnone and Angelo Leogrande ()
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Carlo Drago: Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche, Psicologiche, della Comunicazione, della Formazione e Motorie, Niccolò Cusano University, 00166 Rome, Italy
Alberto Costantiello: Dipartimento di Management, Finanza e Tecnologia, LUM University Giuseppe Degennaro, 70010 Casamassima, Italy
Massimo Arnone: Dipartimento di Economia e Impresa, University of Catania, 95129 Catania, Italy
Angelo Leogrande: Dipartimento di Management, Finanza e Tecnologia, LUM University Giuseppe Degennaro, 70010 Casamassima, Italy

JRFM, 2025, vol. 18, issue 7, 1-71

Abstract: In this work, we examine the correlation between financial inclusion and the Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) factors of sustainable development with the assistance of an exhaustive panel dataset of 103 emerging and developing economies spanning 2011 to 2022. The “Account Age” variable, standing for financial inclusion, is the share of adults owning accounts with formal financial institutions or with the providers of mobile money services, inclusive of both conventional and digital entry points. Methodologically, the article follows an econometric approach with panel data regressions, supplemented by Two-Stage Least Squares (2SLS) with instrumental variables in order to control endogeneity biases. ESG-specific instruments like climate resilience indicators and digital penetration measures are utilized for the purpose of robustness. As a companion approach, the paper follows machine learning techniques, applying a set of algorithms either for regression or for clustering for the purpose of detecting non-linearities and discerning ESG-inclusion typologies for the sample of countries. Results reflect that financial inclusion is, in the Environmental pillar, significantly associated with contemporary sustainability activity such as consumption of green energy, extent of protected area, and value added by agriculture, while reliance on traditional agriculture, measured by land use and value added by agriculture, decreases inclusion. For the Social pillar, expenditure on education, internet, sanitation, and gender equity are prominent inclusion facilitators, while engagement with the informal labor market exhibits a suppressing function. For the Governance pillar, anti-corruption activity and patent filing activity are inclusive, while diminishing regulatory quality, possibly by way of digital governance gaps, has a negative correlation. Policy implications are substantial: the research suggests that development dividends from a multi-dimensional approach can be had through enhancing financial inclusion. Policies that intersect financial access with upgrading the environment, social expenditure, and institutional reconstitution can simultaneously support sustainability targets. These are the most applicable lessons for the policy-makers and development professionals concerned with the attainment of the SDGs, specifically over the regions of the Global South, where the trinity of climate resilience, social fairness, and institutional renovation most significantly manifests.

Keywords: financial inclusion; ESG framework; developing countries; instrumental variables; sustainable development (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: C E F2 F3 G (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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