Do Black Fintechs Matter? The Long and Winding Road to Develop Inclusive Algorithms for Social Justice

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SKU
18288

Publication History

Received: June 30, 2022
Revised: February 28, 2023; September 1, 2023; October 26, 2023
Accepted: January 9, 2024
Published Online as Accepted Author Version: July 30, 2024
Published Online as Articles in Advance: Forthcoming
Published Online in Issue: Forthcoming

https://doi.org/10.25300/MISQ/2024/18288 

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Abstract

Racism in the financial sector is a complex global phenomenon involving intertwined social, economic and digital systems. Credit denial rates for black applicants suggest that financial systems have assimilated racial discrimination into their algorithms and credit scoring tools. Considering that digital tools incorporate their developers' life experiences and perspectives, and in view of the low representation of the black community in the digital startup universe, it is evident that even well-meaning fintechs are reproducing racial bias in their technology-intensive business models. In this paper, we investigate how three black-owned Brazilian fintechs design and use inclusive algorithms to decrease persistent social injustice involving racial financial inclusion. We combine the concept of socio-technical reconfiguration, taken from the South American tradition of social technology, with the three core concepts of Nancy Fraser’s theory of social justice – representation, recognition and redistribution – to analyze the process by which black-owned fintechs develop their particular solutions for combating racial bias. We found that, pressured by the need to be profitable, the lack of capital to develop their own credit scoring tools, and the low profile maintained by the black community ecosystem, black-owned fintechs focus on a sort of affirmative experimentation to gradually create original digital solutions aimed at achieving social justice in the financial system. 

Additional Details
Author Eduardo Henrique Diniz, Bruno Henrique Sanches, Marlei Pozzebon, and Simone Luvizan
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Keywords algorithm racial bias, black-owned fintechs, social justice, social technology, financial inclusion
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