Algorithmic Inclusion Paradox Access Expansion, Capability Erosion, and Financial Precarity in Digital Banking Environments: A Capability-Governance Framework
Christian Anthony R. Flores
Discipline: business and management (non-specific)
Abstract:
The rapid diffusion of algorithmic decision systems in retail banking
has significantly expanded access to formal financial services, particularly
among previously underserved populations. However, emerging empirical
evidence suggests that expanded access does not uniformly translate into
improved financial outcomes. This study advances the concept of the
Algorithmic Inclusion Paradox, which captures the counterintuitive dynamic in
which algorithmic banking systems simultaneously enhance financial access
while undermining users' capabilities and exacerbating conditions of financial
precarity. Drawing on the capability approach and contemporary scholarship
on algorithmic governance, the study develops a Capability-Governance
Framework to explain how automated credit assessment, opaque scoring
mechanisms, and weak institutional safeguards interact to erode financial
capability despite increased inclusion. The framework theorizes that access
expansion operates through distinct structural pathways mediated by
borrower capability and moderated by governance quality that shape
household vulnerability, risk exposure, and resilience within digital banking
environments. By integrating human capability considerations with
institutional governance mechanisms, this study contributes a theory-building
perspective that extends existing financial inclusion and fintech literature
beyond access-centric models. The proposed framework offers a basis for
empirical testing. It provides policy-relevant insights for regulators and
financial institutions seeking to design responsible, human-centered
algorithmic banking systems that promote sustainable inclusion rather than
financial precarity.
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