Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion

The need for improved institutional interventions aimed at increasing access to financial services by small and medium enterprises (SMEs) has been emphasized. Complimenting these efforts, this study proposes that building social networks capable of informing requisite financial behaviors would facil...

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Main Authors: Chike Onodugo, Ifeoma Onodugo, Anastasia Ogbo, Henry Okwo, Charles Ogbaekirigwe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives" 2021-09-01
Series:Problems and Perspectives in Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/15624/PPM_2021_03_Onodugo.pdf
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spelling doaj-0c29ac15dc2a4063814b76b874dd45cd2021-09-28T10:48:06ZengLLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"Problems and Perspectives in Management1727-70511810-54672021-09-0119350251210.21511/ppm.19(3).2021.4115624Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusionChike Onodugo0Ifeoma Onodugo1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4462-1293Anastasia Ogbo2Henry Okwo3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4994-8199Charles Ogbaekirigwe4Ph.D., Faculty of Business Administration, Department of Management, University of NigeriaPh.D., Lecturer, Faculty of Business Administration, Department of Management, University of NigeriaPh.D., Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Business Administration, Department of Management, University of NigeriaPh.D., Faculty of Business Administration, Department of Management, University of NigeriaPh.D., Lecturer, Faculty of Management Sciences, Department of Business Administration, Alex Ekwueme Federal University Ndufu Alike IkwoThe need for improved institutional interventions aimed at increasing access to financial services by small and medium enterprises (SMEs) has been emphasized. Complimenting these efforts, this study proposes that building social networks capable of informing requisite financial behaviors would facilitate the financial inclusion of SMEs co-existing in business clusters. This study aimed to empirically test the moderating influence of collective action, bonding, trust, and bridging on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion. Using a sample of 311 owners/managers of small and medium scale businesses in sub-urban clusters in South-Eastern Nigeria, the hierarchical moderated regression analysis was used to test the hypotheses of the study. Results show a positive main effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion (βf = 0.162; t (304) = 1.503; p < 0.05). Also, collective action (βfca = 0.201; t (304) = 6.906; p < 0.05) and bridging (βfbr = 0.201; t (304) = 6.906; p < 0.05) had positive moderating effects, bonding (βfb = 0.032; t (304) = 1.423; p > 0.05) and trust (βft = 0.014; t (304) = 0.9609; p > 0.05) were statistically insignificant. For policy implications, social virtues such as bridging and collective action are more veritable tools for financial inclusion than the personal virtues of trust and bonding and should be factored into economic and social intervention being deployed by institutions interested in meeting the banking/financial needs of businesses.https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/15624/PPM_2021_03_Onodugo.pdfbondingbridgingcollective actionfinancial behaviorfinancial inclusionNigeria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chike Onodugo
Ifeoma Onodugo
Anastasia Ogbo
Henry Okwo
Charles Ogbaekirigwe
spellingShingle Chike Onodugo
Ifeoma Onodugo
Anastasia Ogbo
Henry Okwo
Charles Ogbaekirigwe
Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion
Problems and Perspectives in Management
bonding
bridging
collective action
financial behavior
financial inclusion
Nigeria
author_facet Chike Onodugo
Ifeoma Onodugo
Anastasia Ogbo
Henry Okwo
Charles Ogbaekirigwe
author_sort Chike Onodugo
title Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion
title_short Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion
title_full Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion
title_fullStr Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion
title_full_unstemmed Moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion
title_sort moderating role of social capital on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion
publisher LLC "CPC "Business Perspectives"
series Problems and Perspectives in Management
issn 1727-7051
1810-5467
publishDate 2021-09-01
description The need for improved institutional interventions aimed at increasing access to financial services by small and medium enterprises (SMEs) has been emphasized. Complimenting these efforts, this study proposes that building social networks capable of informing requisite financial behaviors would facilitate the financial inclusion of SMEs co-existing in business clusters. This study aimed to empirically test the moderating influence of collective action, bonding, trust, and bridging on the effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion. Using a sample of 311 owners/managers of small and medium scale businesses in sub-urban clusters in South-Eastern Nigeria, the hierarchical moderated regression analysis was used to test the hypotheses of the study. Results show a positive main effect of financial behavior on financial inclusion (βf = 0.162; t (304) = 1.503; p < 0.05). Also, collective action (βfca = 0.201; t (304) = 6.906; p < 0.05) and bridging (βfbr = 0.201; t (304) = 6.906; p < 0.05) had positive moderating effects, bonding (βfb = 0.032; t (304) = 1.423; p > 0.05) and trust (βft = 0.014; t (304) = 0.9609; p > 0.05) were statistically insignificant. For policy implications, social virtues such as bridging and collective action are more veritable tools for financial inclusion than the personal virtues of trust and bonding and should be factored into economic and social intervention being deployed by institutions interested in meeting the banking/financial needs of businesses.
topic bonding
bridging
collective action
financial behavior
financial inclusion
Nigeria
url https://www.businessperspectives.org/images/pdf/applications/publishing/templates/article/assets/15624/PPM_2021_03_Onodugo.pdf
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