Dimensions & Insights: Blockchain and Fintech Expand With Diversity and Inclusion

Inclusive and collaborative innovations, such as digital assets and blockchain, exemplify financial technology and services that can change the trajectory of economies while benefiting many global participants. Chief Diversity Officer Regina Curry and Franklin Templeton Head of Digital Assets Roger Bayston believe creating workplaces with intentional collaborative, inclusive, and debiasing practices can power great development environments. These actions enable trust and diversity that can impact innovation and business growth.

As investors, we know diversity drives innovation.1 Actively incorporating universal and unique perspectives, experiences, and backgrounds on a global scale foster transformative technology. Inclusive and collaborative innovations, such as digital assets and blockchain,2 exemplify financial technology (FinTech) and services that can change the trajectory of economies while benefiting many global participants. Some examples:

  • Creating products and services for our modern world and our future requires activating diverse representation and inclusivity within FinTech advances. Supporting entrepreneurs from diverse backgrounds can address gender, racial, ethnic, and cultural divisions in financial services.3
  • Digital financial services and blockchain technology can help reach the approximately 1.4 billion adults unbanked globally4 by offering access to microloans, remittances, shopping, business funds, and personal savings through a smartphone.
  • The long-term success for the digital assets ecosystem will rely on building collaborative, inclusive, and diverse networks. Blockchain networks have the single pursuit of growing and expanding by adding users. Blockchain protocols and transparency verifies trustworthiness, eliminating biases based on race, gender, sexual orientation, age, socioeconomic status, and additional identity characteristics. Implicit homogeneous identity biases can also produce sameness of thinking which tend to operate in more centralized environments. These inclusive innovations will not reach their full potential if their development includes biases.