Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Common Sense Economics of the Excluded

The practical economic wisdom already present in unbanked communities, validated by Yacob's trust in universal human reason applied to material survival.

Zera
Why It Matters

Zera Yacob believed that reason is not the property of elites but distributed universally across humanity. The unbanked and poor exercise sophisticated economic reasoning daily: managing scarce resources, assessing risk, planning for seasons and emergencies, rotating credit within communities. This is common-sense economics born from necessity and sharpened by experience. Rather than assuming excluded populations need financial literacy imposed from above, this concept recognizes that financial inclusion succeeds when it builds on existing wisdom. The informal savings groups, rotating credit systems, and barter networks prevalent in unbanked communities reflect sound reasoning about trust, obligation, and value. Modern financial inclusion platforms that dismiss these practices as primitive miss an opportunity to integrate proven mechanisms into formal systems. Yacob's philosophy validates that the reasoning of the poor is as sound as that of bankers; exclusion is not intellectual but structural. Effective inclusion honors existing economic sense while connecting it to formal systems.

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Zera
Money & Finance
Peri
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The Examined Path Through Financial inclusion and the unbanked
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