By Howard Williams

Financial inclusion for unbanked Caribbean communities

Walk through any market in Kingston, Port-au-Prince, or Georgetown, and you will find people who work hard every day, save their money, pay their bills on time, and yet remain invisible to the formal financial system. No credit score. No loan access. No path to homeownership. Just a locked door where opportunity should be. This is the reality for the majority of Caribbean people, and it is a crisis that Credit Garden was built to solve.

70% of Caribbean adults are considered underserved by traditional credit systems. Globally, over 1.4 billion adults remain unbanked. In Latin America, approximately 7 in 10 people lack full access to credit and savings products. (World Bank Global Findex Database 2025)

What Does Unbanked Actually Mean?

The term "unbanked" refers to adults who have no bank account with a formal financial institution. The "underbanked" have some form of account but lack access to credit, loans, mortgages, or insurance products that would allow them to build wealth and withstand financial shocks.

In the Caribbean and Latin America, both categories are widespread. Even where bank account ownership has improved, thanks largely to mobile banking and government cash transfer programs, access to credit remains stubbornly out of reach for the majority.

The Scale of the Problem in the Caribbean

The numbers are stark. According to the World Bank:

In 2024, only 35% of adults in Latin America and the Caribbean said they could sustain household expenses for more than two months if they lost their income. Financial resilience is directly linked to credit access.

Why Are So Many People Left Out?

The barriers to financial inclusion in the Caribbean and Latin America are structural, historical, and systemic. They include:

1. Credit Systems Built Elsewhere

The dominant credit scoring models in the world were designed in the United States. They assume formal employment records, W-2 income statements, long-term credit card histories, and a dense data trail with credit bureaus. None of these assumptions hold for the majority of Caribbean workers, who may be self-employed, work in agriculture or tourism, receive remittances, or operate in the informal economy.

2. Lack of Credit History

Traditional scoring requires data. If you have never had a formal loan or credit card, you have no credit file. This creates a Catch-22: you cannot get credit because you have no history, and you cannot build history because you cannot get credit. In Jamaica alone, hundreds of thousands of adults fall into this trap.

3. Geography and Infrastructure

Rural populations across the Caribbean face physical barriers to banking. Many small islands and rural communities lack bank branches. Even where mobile banking exists, limited smartphone penetration and data costs create additional friction.

4. Cost and Documentation

Opening a bank account in many Caribbean countries requires documentation, minimum balances, and fees that are prohibitive for low-income individuals. In 2021, 60% of unbanked people in Latin America and the Caribbean cited the cost of financial services as a primary barrier.

5. Gender Inequality

Women across the region face compounded barriers. In 2024, the gender gap in financial account ownership in Central America reached 20 percentage points in El Salvador and 19 in Honduras. Caribbean women in the informal economy are disproportionately excluded from credit.

The Economic Cost of Exclusion

Financial exclusion is not just a personal hardship. It is an economic drain on entire nations. When people cannot access credit, they cannot invest in businesses, education, or housing. Research consistently shows that a 1% increase in financial inclusion contributes approximately 0.03% to annual GDP per capita growth. For a region hungry for development, closing the financial inclusion gap is not charity, it is strategy.

Three-quarters of digital bank customers in Latin America and the Caribbean are previously unbanked or underbanked consumers. Fintech and AI are opening doors that traditional banking never could.

How AI is Changing the Story

This is where Credit Garden and the broader AI revolution in finance are rewriting the rules. Traditional credit scoring relies on data that millions of Caribbean people simply do not have. AI can work with the data that does exist.

Alternative data sources for AI credit scoring include:

By combining these signals with macroeconomic calibration (GDP, minimum wage, inflation, financial infrastructure), Credit Garden's World Credit Score creates a fair and reliable assessment for people who have been invisible to traditional systems.

Jamaican Innovation: JAM-DEX and Financial Inclusion

Jamaica became one of the first countries in the world to launch a Central Bank Digital Currency with JAM-DEX. As adoption grows, digital wallet transactions create a data trail that can be used as positive credit signals. This is exactly the kind of innovation Credit Garden is positioned to leverage, turning everyday financial activity into credit strength.

What Needs to Change

Solving the unbanked crisis in the Caribbean requires action at multiple levels:

Know Your Credit Strength Today

Whether you have a long credit history or none at all, Credit Garden's World Credit Score gives you a fair, AI-powered assessment calibrated to your country's economic reality.

Get My Free World Credit Score

The Bottom Line

The unbanked and underbanked crisis in the Caribbean is real, significant, and solvable. The tools exist. The data exists. What has been missing is the will and the innovation to apply them fairly. Credit Garden was built precisely to fill that gap, to grow the financial garden that has been neglected for too long across our beautiful region.

Financial freedom is not a privilege for the few. It is a right for every Caribbean person who works, saves, and builds a life. And that journey begins with knowing your Credit Strength.