Episodes
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01:23 Starting where insurance stops – the mandate for AXA Emerging Customers
(Find out more about AXA Emerging Customers here)
03:26 How COVID has exposed the vulnerabilities of emerging customers…
04:22 …and forced us all to take a crash course in health management
06:03 What is different about women’s insurance needs and preferences?
(You can read more in the brilliant “She for Shield” study from AXA, IFC and Accenture)
08:45 Debunking myths about women as insurance customers. Myth #1: Women are more loyal
09:50 Myth #2: Women are risk averse
10:29 Myth #3: Women are less fraudulent
10:54 What it means to serve women as decision-makers
14:13 The product changes that make a difference for women
16:19 Putting these lessons into practice to serve women in emerging markets
19:57 Insurance without a Chinese wall – making insurance work for women at the heads of families and businesses
21:41 How to get gender on the strategic map for a company
24:11 Success as an intrapreneur
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00:39 Before we start on the interview, a shoutout to the Homebrewed Feminism podcast. You can find the podcast at homebrewedfeminism.com and listen to their discussion of our interview with Marion Sharples in Episode 6: Equity > Equality.
01:07 The Women's Budget Group report on Migrant Women and the Economy. Read the full report here.
02:31 Immigration in the UK and the "hostile environment"
10:01 How men's and women's pattern of migration vary
13:27 Impacts on the economic position of migrant women
19:59 Challenges in accessing financial services
22:10 The disproportionate impact of COVID-19 on migrant women
30:32 And what about when lockdown rules are relaxed?
35:53 The rights of migrants and the Black Lives Matter movement
39:38 The proposals of the Women's Budget Group to improve the economic position of migrants in the UK
46:00 Migrant women have faced the worst of our collective crises in 2020. Here, I also talk about the Women's Budget Group's webinar which brought together many organizations supporting migrant women, including Southhall Black Sisters, the Latin American Women's Rights Service, Women for Refugee Women and Foleshill Women's Training. You can find the webinar here.
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Episodes manquant?
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You can find out more about Quipu through their website and find updates on their instagram.
And read here about the company's recent recognition in the Visa Everywhere Initiative awards, in which it won third place in Latin America and the Caribbean.
01:15 - The micro-businesses at the centre of local economies
03:11 - How COVID is both challenging and bolstering local economies
05:47 - The history of community currencies and how they can apply in Latin America today
09:08 - How Quipu uses a digital marketplace and community currency in order to build and maintain wealth locally
14:42 - Launching the Quipu platform in Baranquilla, Colombia, in the midst of a pandemic
16:10 - How micro businesses are using the Quipu platform in Baranquilla
19:07 - Co-designing the platform: What does a solidarity economy mean to you?
23:58 - Helping entrepreneurs access credit at fairer rates
28:31 - The importance of creating solidarity economies, and why its moving up the agenda now
32:06 - Next steps for Quipu
33:41 - Are we all in need of an emergency community currency?
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Find out more about Caribou Digital: cariboudigital.net
And you can read more on these topics and others from Savita, Hélène, and their colleagues in Caribou's blog.
Time-stamped show notes:
01:05 About Caribou
02:45 User research: shifting our focus from the technology and bringing it back to the end user
04:09 What do digital financial services (DFS) have to offer women? (Clue: it's not so much about the digital)
08:32 And what is getting in their way of accessing digital financial services?
15:21 Why trust and control are so important for women
19:57 Financial literacy and the role of cash
21:55 When money becomes mobile and the tricky issue of registering your own SIM
25:55 The companies and organizations proactively taking on the challenges women face
29:33 The impact of COVID-19 on use of digital financial services
32:37 Is online work better work? The benefits and complications of digital platform work for women
37:42 Hélène and Savita help us define a feminist future for digital financial services
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01:14 What is blockchain?
05:42 Big potential and broken promises
10:00 Why Lisa began knish.io and how she hopes to tackle some of the challenges of blockchain
15:09 How can blockchain help with payments?
18:25 Providing a system for triple-bottom-line initiatives
20:09 An initiative to track sexual harassment
24:00 How blockchain can be relevant to governments
28:58 Can blockchain help fight a global pandemic?
31:18 Supporting women and minority founders through COVID-19 (and beyond)
Find out more at knish.io
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01:28 Introducing APCOM and the Finance Inc. project
03:56 Addressing new actors in LGBTQI inclusion: development banks and the private sector
06:27 APCOM's work with the Asian Development Bank
07:44 How development banks could do more
09:35 Discrimination in the domains of education, work, health and financial services compound one another. The results of APCOM's research into experiences of exclusion of LGBTQI groups.
15:21 Experiences with financial institutions
19:02 How financial institutions can support LGBTQI individuals
19:53 The need for two-way capacity building between financial institutions and LGBTQI organizations
20:54 Might digital financial services help reduce discrimination?
23:54 What would a financial system that was truly inclusive of LGBTQI people look like?
26:52 My reflections on the interview
27:24 What about COVID-19?
You can find out more about APCOM's research into the impact of COVID-19 and its effects on diverse SOGIESC communities, HIV services and key populations here.
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00:47 - Why the economy is central to gender equality; about the Women's Budget Group's Commission on a Gender-Equal Economy
03:41 - Gathering inputs across the UK to design a gender-equal economy
You can read about the evidence submitted to the Commission here.
07:46 - The economic barriers women face
09:01 - What women want from a gender-equal economy
10:19 - Care and the cycle of inequality
You can take a look at this short video which the Women's Budget Group created to illustrate the spirals of inequality related to care and read the report here.
14:28 - Might there be a silver lining for care in COVID-19?
Here, Marion mentions a poll from the Fawcett Society which showed that 65% of respondents supported an increase in income tax to fund a pay rise for care workers.
She also highlights this Financial Times editorial which argues that COVID-19 has made clear "the fragility of the social contract", and that "radical reforms — reversing the prevailing policy direction of the last four decades — will need to be put on the table."
20:53 - The need for huge government investment in care, including universal childcare provision
23:46 - A Green New Deal should be a feminist deal; care jobs are green jobs
Find out more about the WBG's proposals for a feminist green new deal through this webinar recording, paper and article.
29:11 - What's next for the Commission on a Gender-Equal Economy
You can find upcoming webinars from the Women's Budget Group here.
And read more about the Commission on a Gender-Equal Economy here.
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01:17 About Iona's pioneering Young Money blog
02:12 The impact of COVID-19 on young people - the millennials and the "coronials"
04:11 The economic impacts of the crisis in the UK
06:53 How women are drawing the short straw
11:35 The long-term impacts on the coronial generation and rethinking university education
14:01 The case for a debt jubilee
21:11 Who is benefitting from banks' measures to address the crisis
24:23 The need to know your financial rights - how can we get the message out?
25:50 Why women's financial independence should no longer be up for debate
29:47 Financial education doesn't belong in maths classes
31:32 A feminist financial system - Iona's take
34:11 Wrapping up and a reflection on two themes coming up repeatedly in the Feminist Finance podcast:
Care at the centre of women's financeThe need for a new kind of financial education in schools -
Resources and contacts:
If you work in insurance and would like to know more about how your company can support victims and survivors of economic abuse, please do get in touch: [email protected] You can find out more about economic abuse at survivingeconomicabuse.org or by listening to episode 8 of the Feminist Finance Podcast with the Founder and Chief Executive of the charity, Dr. Nicola Sharp-JeffsYou can also read our article on this topic in the Insurance PostAnd read Clare Throssell's story hereTimestamped episode notes
00.37 A recap - what is economic abuse?
01:49 Introducing a project that is close to my heart - how can insurers support victims of abuse?
02:59 The story of Clare Throssell. How a cancelled home insurance policy left her unprotected
05:30 Victims and survivors of abuse struggle to get insurance
06:13 Details of insurance wording are leaving domestic abuse victims unable to claim on their insurance
08:26 Victim's private information can be put at risk
09:21 How policies can be taken out, canceled or changed without consent
10:11 Economic abuse is a mainstream issue that insurers must address
11:29 Changes to insurance policies and processes that could make all the difference for victims and survivors
12:52 Insurance wordings haven't changed for decades and weren't written with the reality of women's lives in mind
13:44 Helping insurance staff recognise abuse and support victims
14:51 Could you help us better support victims and survivors of abuse?
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Find out more about Surviving Economic Abuse at: survivingeconomicabuse.org
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More information on the Access to Cash Review and their full report can be found at accesstcocash.org.uk and you can follow Natalie on Twitter.
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01:41 Why Nathalie founded O³ and her focus on outcomes over optics.
04:20 Nathalie's approach to investing to benefit women and the planet through "builder capital". What builder capital is and how it differs from the usual venture capital approach.
07:35 Why stereotypically "female" qualities are necessary to address the major problems we face today. (Nathalie mentions John Gerzema's book, The Athena Doctrine.)
11:43 What investors can do to tackle the climate crisis and why they need to shift their mindset to focus on the technologies we already have to mitigate climate change. Why investors should tackle social, equality and environmental issues in a holistic way.
19:18 Why the solutions that center women are the most effective in tackling the climate crisis. Nathalie discusses the research of Katharine Wilkinson and her book Drawdown, and talks about a company in the Niger Delta using distributed ledger technology to pay women directly to tackle plastic pollution.
25:28 Nathalie explains her thesis of investing in solutions that work at scale to lift up billions of women.
29:42 Why it's important not only to lift up women entrepreneurs and executives, but to focus on solutions that lift up the vast majority of women.
32:43 The actions we can take individually to address inequality.
40:56 Nathalie's perspective on a feminist financial system: patience on returns and impatience in tackling our social and environmental problems.
Get in touch and share your ideas on this episode on twitter or by email: [email protected]
You can find out more about Nathalie on her website or follow her on Twitter.
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Oliver is Senior Insights Manager with the Connected Women team at the GSMA. Oliver leads the programme's research and analysis on the mobile gender gap, and is the author of the annual Mobile Gender Gap Report series. He works with the mobile industry across Africa and Asia to provide insights that inform new approaches to driving greater digital and financial inclusion of women through mobile.
Take a look at the full Mobile Gender Gap Report 2020 on the GSMA website: www.gsma.com/r/gender-gap/
You can read more about the importance of video calls in South Asia, particularly for women: www.gsma.com/mobilefordevelopme…-women-south-asia/
Let me know your ideas and reactions to the podcast on twitter or by email: [email protected]
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You can follow Helen on Twitter, and find our more about Talk Money Week and the Insuring Women's Futures campaign.
Keep up to date with the podcast and more by signing up to the Feminist Finance newsletter.
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Find out more about the International Research Institute for Climate and Society and the R4 rural resilience initiative.
To read more about forecast-based financing, you can start with this short summary from the World Food Programme.
And you can follow Rahel on LinkedIn.
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To find out more, visit the website of MeXCo, join Andares and follow Barbara on Twitter.
The study on repayment rates of digital loans in Kenya and Tanzania was carried out by CGAP, FSD Kenya and FSD Tanzania.
And the video of MeXCo team's award for bravery can be seen on Instagram.
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Dr Naaborle Sackeyfio is Assistant Professor of Global and Intercultural Studies at Miami University of Ohio. In this episode, Naborle questions assumptions that microfinance automatically empowers women. She draws on her long experience researching the sector to explain how the impact of microfinance is inseparable from women's social position, family life and access to vital resources like energy. Naaborle argues for reimagining financial institutions to truly encompass the creativity and the power of women. We couldn't agree more!
To find out more about Naaborle's reaserch, take a look at her book: Energy Politics and Rural Development in Sub-Saharan Africa - The Case of Ghana
https://www.palgrave.com/de/book/9783319601212 -
What would a feminist financial system look like? This podcast brings together leading women in the sector to define feminist finance and talk about how we get there.
Hear from Dr Naaborle Sackeyfio, Barbara Magnoni and Rahel Diro in this trailer and subscribe to hear the full episodes launching next week.