Skip to main content
UMD College of Behavorial & Social Sciences UMD College of Behavorial & Social Sciences
MENU
  • Home
  • Research
  • People
  • Grant Support
  • Resources
  • About
Search

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Research
  • People
  • Grant Support
  • Resources
  • About

Search our site:

Engaging Women in the Market for Mobile Money

Breadcrumb

  • Home
  • Featured Content
  • Engaging Women In The Market For Mobile Money
Jessica Goldberg

Mobile money has been shown to reduce aggregate poverty and improve outcomes for households and businesses. However, not everyone has equal access to this important economic tool. In low income communities, women lag behind men in participation in both mobile money and labor markets. Prof. Goldberg's research project will use experimental methods to study how bias against women in the mobile money market affects their labor market participation, human capital formation, and other social outcomes. It also studies whether employing women as mobile money agents decreases labor market bias against women generally and improves their social outcomes. The results of this research will provide guidance on policies to decrease labor markets against women but could also provide mechanisms to decrease poverty and reduce income inequality. Hiring women as mobile money agents offers an opportunity to increase economic opportunities for women, change social attitudes towards women's labor force participation, and improve their access to mobile money.

The project uses a randomized controlled trial to measure the causal effects of employing women as mobile money agents on the economic and other social outcomes in low-income environments. It also studies the effects of work on the incomes, skill accumulation, and autonomy of women compared to men; and whether the availability of female mobile money agents increases the use of mobile money by female customers. The research will study how female labor supply responds to the number of women working as mobile money agents by randomly assigning subsidies to 500 shops for hiring either male or female employees. On the demand side, the researchers will randomize the digitization of loan repayments at 90 BRAC branches, which increases the demand for mobile money by female customers. The results of this research will not only provide guidance on policies to decrease labor market bias against women but could also decrease poverty as well as reduce income inequality.

 

 Engaging Women in the Market for Mobile Money, NSF, $236,685

Published on Thu, 04/24/2025 - 10:40

College of Behavioral & Social Sciences

Maryland Population Research Center

2105 Morrill Hall • College Park, MD 20742
Phone: 301-405-6403

For site issues, contact the webmaster.

Contact MPRC

Links
  • UMD Land Acknowledgement
  • UMD Staff Directory
  • UMD Web Accessibility
  • Alumni
© 2026 College of Behavioral & Social Sciences. All Rights Reserved.
Login