Converting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America

This paper discusses what are now known as dormant or “zombie” accounts, which have their origin in conditional transfer programs and other government programs that created accounts for beneficiaries at the respective state bank or in the banking system. The focus is on Peru, where these accounts were created at the Banco de la Nación. Based on statistical analysis, this paper adopts two definitions for an account to be “non-zombie”. On this basis, on the deposit side, for Juntos only 4 percent of accounts were found to be non-zombie; for Pension 65, only 0.2 percent; and for Beca 18, 32 percent. On the expenditures side, 10 percent qualified as non-zombie for Juntos and Pension 65, and above 90 percent for Beca 18. Although zombie accounts can evolve into non-zombie accounts, under current conditions the process is slow. While significant prima facie benefits can come from converting dormant accounts to digital wallets, a number of requirements need to be fulfilled first, including users’ requirements and minimum ecosystem requirements, and various sub-ecosystems must be integrated, such as payments between persons, digital payments to service institutions, and digital payments to businesses.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inter-American Development Bank
Other Authors: Daniel M. Schydlowsky
Format: Discussion Papers & Presentations biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Inter-American Development Bank
Subjects:Financial Inclusion, G18 - Government Policy and Regulation, digital payments;financial inclusion,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0001211
https://publications.iadb.org/en/converting-dormant-bank-accounts-dynamic-force-latin-america
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spelling dig-bid-node-130092020-06-04T22:29:13ZConverting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America 2018-07-03T00:00:00+0000 http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0001211 https://publications.iadb.org/en/converting-dormant-bank-accounts-dynamic-force-latin-america Inter-American Development Bank Financial Inclusion G18 - Government Policy and Regulation digital payments;financial inclusion This paper discusses what are now known as dormant or “zombie” accounts, which have their origin in conditional transfer programs and other government programs that created accounts for beneficiaries at the respective state bank or in the banking system. The focus is on Peru, where these accounts were created at the Banco de la Nación. Based on statistical analysis, this paper adopts two definitions for an account to be “non-zombie”. On this basis, on the deposit side, for Juntos only 4 percent of accounts were found to be non-zombie; for Pension 65, only 0.2 percent; and for Beca 18, 32 percent. On the expenditures side, 10 percent qualified as non-zombie for Juntos and Pension 65, and above 90 percent for Beca 18. Although zombie accounts can evolve into non-zombie accounts, under current conditions the process is slow. While significant prima facie benefits can come from converting dormant accounts to digital wallets, a number of requirements need to be fulfilled first, including users’ requirements and minimum ecosystem requirements, and various sub-ecosystems must be integrated, such as payments between persons, digital payments to service institutions, and digital payments to businesses. Inter-American Development Bank Daniel M. Schydlowsky Discussion Papers & Presentations application/pdf IDB Publications Peru Latin America and the Caribbean en
institution BID
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-bid
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca Felipe Herrera del BID
language English
topic Financial Inclusion
G18 - Government Policy and Regulation
digital payments;financial inclusion
Financial Inclusion
G18 - Government Policy and Regulation
digital payments;financial inclusion
spellingShingle Financial Inclusion
G18 - Government Policy and Regulation
digital payments;financial inclusion
Financial Inclusion
G18 - Government Policy and Regulation
digital payments;financial inclusion
Inter-American Development Bank
Converting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America
description This paper discusses what are now known as dormant or “zombie” accounts, which have their origin in conditional transfer programs and other government programs that created accounts for beneficiaries at the respective state bank or in the banking system. The focus is on Peru, where these accounts were created at the Banco de la Nación. Based on statistical analysis, this paper adopts two definitions for an account to be “non-zombie”. On this basis, on the deposit side, for Juntos only 4 percent of accounts were found to be non-zombie; for Pension 65, only 0.2 percent; and for Beca 18, 32 percent. On the expenditures side, 10 percent qualified as non-zombie for Juntos and Pension 65, and above 90 percent for Beca 18. Although zombie accounts can evolve into non-zombie accounts, under current conditions the process is slow. While significant prima facie benefits can come from converting dormant accounts to digital wallets, a number of requirements need to be fulfilled first, including users’ requirements and minimum ecosystem requirements, and various sub-ecosystems must be integrated, such as payments between persons, digital payments to service institutions, and digital payments to businesses.
author2 Daniel M. Schydlowsky
author_facet Daniel M. Schydlowsky
Inter-American Development Bank
format Discussion Papers & Presentations
topic_facet Financial Inclusion
G18 - Government Policy and Regulation
digital payments;financial inclusion
author Inter-American Development Bank
author_sort Inter-American Development Bank
title Converting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America
title_short Converting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America
title_full Converting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America
title_fullStr Converting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America
title_full_unstemmed Converting Dormant Bank Accounts into a Dynamic Force in Latin America
title_sort converting dormant bank accounts into a dynamic force in latin america
publisher Inter-American Development Bank
url http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0001211
https://publications.iadb.org/en/converting-dormant-bank-accounts-dynamic-force-latin-america
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