Benefits for Dominican citizens
Distributing public services through Visa prepaid cards resulted in a faster, more cost-effective benefits programme.
We believe everyone has the right to access basic financial services.
Our products are helping the underserved around the world.
Distributing public services through Visa prepaid cards resulted in a faster, more cost-effective benefits programme.
Rwanda is just one example of how working towards financial inclusion can transform lives.
Achieving greater financial inclusion requires working collaboratively with leading partners.
We work with recognised development organisations to understand the financial lives of the underserved and to support on-the-ground programmes to meet their financial needs.
Visa, along with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, USAID, Citi, the UN Capital Development Fund, Ford Foundation and the Omidyar Network, formed the Better Than Cash Alliance to speed the transition from cash to electronic payments, an important step in advancing greater inclusion.
In Ghana, Visa is working with CARE to provide full-service banking to remote areas through mobile technology. CARE community savings groups can open and operate a savings account without travelling to a physical bank.
This partnership is focused on increasing women’s access to financial services in Nigeria. The project is aimed at enabling more female entrepreneurs to become agents in the retail network of a leading financial services provider.
Visa, the Citi Foundation and the Center for Financial Inclusion at Accion founded the Financial Inclusion 2020 initiative to help achieve a world with universal access to quality financial services.
Three hundred million fewer women than men own mobile phones. The Alliance is working to improve women’s lives through access to mobile technology, which in turn gives them access to financial services, education and healthcare.
Visa worked with Kiva.org, the world’s first personal microlending website, to expand economic inclusion opportunities for U.S. small businesses through access to microloans.
Visa has partnered with Women’s World Banking, a global network of microfinance organisations that works to empower and drive financial inclusion for impoverished Nigerian women and their families.
Visa works with CFSI to support programmes serving underbanked communities across North America.
Empowering the world with financial knowledge
For nearly two decades, Visa's financial literacy programmes have educated millions of children and adults in more than 30 countries on how to manage their money wisely. These programmes are all designed with one goal in mind: To ensure that as individuals gain access to financial services, they do so with a sound understanding of money management.
Whether it’s a theatre that teaches budgeting to children in Brazil, or a FIFA World Cup™ branded video game about personal finance basics, our free literacy programmes are culturally relevant, innovative and engaging.
Our financial literacy websites, localised around the globe, draw millions of visits each year from parents, teachers, students and consumers looking for free, high-quality personal finance information for the classroom and home.
Visa’s pledge through the Clinton Global Initiative to reach 20 million people worldwide with our financial literacy programme by May 1, 2013 was surpassed one year ahead of schedule. Visa has now reached more than 33 million people.
From 2012 to 2014, Visa also hosted a series of high-level conferences in India, Eastern Europe, Kenya, Middle East, Brazil and China delivered in collaboration with the Financial Times. These forums were dedicated to improving the financial literacy of individuals from the most vulnerable communities around the globe.
Harnessing the power of the world’s most popular sport, Financial Soccer has been used over 5 million times to date and is available in 15 languages and 41 countries.
Visa and Marvel created an exciting comic, available in eight languages, to help children learn personal finance skills.
An event that gathers thought leaders, policymakers and executives to help enable financial literacy around the world.
The Financial Literacy Travelling Bus makes a stop in China to teach kids about money management.
Visa created this fun NFL-themed video game to tackle the issue of financial literacy among young people.
We have joined forces with the Alliance for Financial Inclusion (AFI). Our mission? To drastically reduce the number of financially excluded people around the world.
Learning about finances is so important – so we made it fun.