Bioethics and Behavioral Finance in Latin America: Ethical Challenges and Policy Pathways for Inclusive Financial Sustainability

Authors

  • Paulette Valenzuela Rincón Universidad de la Salud
  • Felipe de Jesús Vilchis Mora
  • Enrique Martínez Muñoz
  • Jorge Hernández Valdés
  • Juan Guillermo Mansilla Sepúlveda
  • Víctor Hugo Meriño Córdoba
  • Oscar Igor Carreón Valencia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22399/ijsusat.32

Keywords:

bioethics, behavioral finance, Latin America, financial inclusion, fintech; autonomy, justice

Abstract

 This paper examines the intersection of bioethics and behavioral finance in Latin America, emphasizing how behavioral biases, institutional trust, and rapid fintech expansion interact with ethical questions about autonomy, vulnerability, justice, and beneficence in financial services. Using publicly available regional datasets (Global Findex; fintech industry counts), a targeted literature review, and documented statements from regional experts and institutional reports, the study constructs a descriptive empirical picture and offers an ethical analysis oriented to policy and platform design. Results show large gains in account ownership alongside persistent behavioral and structural barriers (planning failures, optimism bias, low financial resilience) that raise bioethical concerns related to informed consent in digital products, distributive justice, and protection of vulnerable populations. The discussion proposes concrete, ethically grounded behavioral interventions and regulatory priorities to promote sustainable, inclusive financial systems that respect individual dignity and public welfare. The paper closes with recommended research and policy steps for scholars, regulators, and fintechs in Latin America.

References

[1]Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development & World Bank (Global Findex). (2022). The Global Findex Database 2021: Financial inclusion, digital payments, and data (World Bank). https://www.worldbank.org/en/publication/globalfindex. (See Global Findex Database 2021 chapter on account ownership.) (Banco Mundial)

[2]Common Cents Lab. (2022). Creating financial resiliency in Latin America: Behavioral challenges and opportunities facing digital work platforms (Center for Advanced Hindsight). https://advanced-hindsight.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Creating-Financial-Resiliency-in-Latin-America.pdf. (Center for Advanced Hindsight)

[3]Mastercard. (2021, May 17). Mastercard, Mercado Libre, Common Cents Lab, and IDB join forces to improve financial resilience [Press release]. https://www.mastercard.com/news/latin-america/en/newsroom/press-releases/pr-en/2021/may/mastercard-mercado-libre-common-cents-lab-and-idb-join-forces-to-improve-financial-resilience/ . (Mastercard)

[4]United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). (2024). Still under the mattress: LAC's incomplete bancarization (blog). https://www.undp.org/latin-america/blog/still-under-mattress-lacs-incomplete-bancarization. (PNUD)

[5]Inter-American Development Bank & Finnovista. (2023). Finnovista & IDB: Fintech landscape report (summary reporting). Cited in Reuters coverage: F. M. (2024, June 20). LatAm fintechs quadruple past 6 years, with more room to grow. Reuters. https://www.reuters.com/technology/latam-fintechs-quadruple-past-6-years-with-more-room-grow-2024-06-20/ . (Reuters)

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Published

2025-09-23

How to Cite

Paulette Valenzuela Rincón, Felipe de Jesús Vilchis Mora, Enrique Martínez Muñoz, Jorge Hernández Valdés, Juan Guillermo Mansilla Sepúlveda, Víctor Hugo Meriño Córdoba, & Oscar Igor Carreón Valencia. (2025). Bioethics and Behavioral Finance in Latin America: Ethical Challenges and Policy Pathways for Inclusive Financial Sustainability. International Journal of Sustainable Science and Technology, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.22399/ijsusat.32

Issue

Section

Articles