TY - JOUR
T1 - Financial Inclusion and the Sustainability of Family Businesses
T2 - Impacts on Household Livelihoods
AU - Osabohien, Romanus
AU - Mabinuori, Oladotun
AU - Uche, Emmanuel
AU - Njogo, Bibiana Oluchukwu
AU - Badmus, Dauda Adeyinka
AU - Adekunle, Kikelomo Julianah
AU - Okere, Wisdom
AU - Ameh, Grace Gift
AU - Adeleke, Oluwayemisi Kadijat
AU - Al-Farya, Mamdouh Abdulaziz Saleh
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, Creative Publishing House. All rights reserved.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - In the context of the empirical literature, the potential of a family business and financial inclusion to drive household livelihood has been a subject of exclusion. Against this backdrop, this study empirically examines how family business and financial inclusion cont ribute to household livelihood in Saudi Arabia. This study is the first to empirically examine how family business and financial inclusion drive household livelihood using the instrumental variable probit model. The study engaged the probit regression. However, to control for the issues of endogeneity, the study applied the instrumental variable probit regression with data sourced from the World Bank Global Financial Index 2021. Three indicators of financial inclusion were used, which are ownership of a financial account, debit card and online tr ansactions. The results show that family business and financial inclusion are positively and significantly associated with household livelihood. This implies that the ownership of a family business is likely to improve household livelihood by 0.3. On the other hand, an increase in ownership of a financial account, ownership and usage of a debit card and online transactions is associated with the probability of a household being in the fourth and richest 20% income quantile by 0.4.
AB - In the context of the empirical literature, the potential of a family business and financial inclusion to drive household livelihood has been a subject of exclusion. Against this backdrop, this study empirically examines how family business and financial inclusion cont ribute to household livelihood in Saudi Arabia. This study is the first to empirically examine how family business and financial inclusion drive household livelihood using the instrumental variable probit model. The study engaged the probit regression. However, to control for the issues of endogeneity, the study applied the instrumental variable probit regression with data sourced from the World Bank Global Financial Index 2021. Three indicators of financial inclusion were used, which are ownership of a financial account, debit card and online tr ansactions. The results show that family business and financial inclusion are positively and significantly associated with household livelihood. This implies that the ownership of a family business is likely to improve household livelihood by 0.3. On the other hand, an increase in ownership of a financial account, ownership and usage of a debit card and online transactions is associated with the probability of a household being in the fourth and richest 20% income quantile by 0.4.
KW - Entrepreneurship
KW - Financial Inclusion
KW - Household Enterprise
KW - Household Livelihood
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85218780559
U2 - 10.62754/joe.v4i1.6079
DO - 10.62754/joe.v4i1.6079
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85218780559
SN - 2752-6798
VL - 4
SP - 2579
EP - 2595
JO - Journal of Ecohumanism
JF - Journal of Ecohumanism
IS - 1
ER -