The principle that individual reason naturally drives people to seek economic participation and financial security, forming the basis for inclusive financial systems.
Zera Yacob's emphasis on reason as the universal human faculty suggests that economic exclusion contradicts fundamental rationality. The unbanked are not irrational but systematically denied access to tools that reason would demand. This concept reframes financial inclusion not as charity but as honoring people's rational capacity to improve their circumstances. When individuals understand their own economic self-interest—saving for emergencies, investing in education, building capital—they naturally seek financial services. Yacob's philosophy validates that excluded populations possess the same reasoning capacity as the wealthy; systemic barriers, not cognitive deficiency, prevent access. By recognizing financial inclusion as serving rational self-interest, platforms can design systems that respect dignity while expanding access to banking, credit, and wealth-building tools for marginalized communities.
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