Abstract

This study examines the role of G20 to encourage financial inclusion as development agenda in developing countries. Structuralism is the analytical tool of this paper. This perspective is used to interpreted financial inclusion as an agenda that is designed by the discourse of liberalism. The developing countries uses this discourse to shape the international structure. This research applies qualitative methods to examine the relation, between developed countries and developing countries. The result shows that, first the financial inclusion is an agenda used or sponsored by developed countries for maintaining the international structure between core and periphery entities; and second the financial inclusion is a momentum to separate the discourse of liberalism, especially in formal financial institution. Therefore, this research has found that formal financial institution (i.e. microfinance institution) got more opportunities.

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