Humanitarian Cash Transfers and Financial Inclusion
Syrian refugees in Lebanon and Jordan receive more than one quarter of their humanitarian assistance in the form of cash and vouchers. Leveraging this aid delivery to connect refugees to the formal financial system requires the host country to have widespread digital financial ecosystem in place and coordination among governments, aid agencies, and financial service providers.
This working paper presents the cases of Jordan and Lebanon and highlights some of the key challenges these actors face in linking cash transfers to financial inclusion more broadly. It examines why the potential pathway to financial inclusion has not yet materialized in these two countries, outline models for strengthening links between cash and voucher assistance (CVA) programs, and address how efficient and effective CVA programs could be created.