from the St Louis Fed
Fintech innovators have been inspired to reshape the way modern banking and payments work. “Why? To solve a problem,” said then-St. Louis Fed Executive Vice President Julie Stackhouse during a recent Dialogue with the Fed event.

“Over the course of particularly the last year and a half, I’ve had a chance to talk to quite a few financial technology entrepreneurs, and each story is a little different,” Stackhouse said. She provided examples of entrepreneurship in financial technology (fintech).
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Stackhouse described how now-St. Louis Fed Board of Directors Deputy Chair Jim McKelvey was inspired to invent the Square merchant payment system after losing a sale at his glass-blowing factory. At the time, his gallery only accepted cash or check, she said.
Another innovator, Quinten Farmer of Even Responsible Finance, came up with a new way for employees to get paycheck advances.
“Payroll systems every two weeks, when you’re living paycheck to paycheck, are archaic. And if you need cash before payday, the tendency is to go to a payday lender,” she said. Stackhouse explained how the Even Responsible Finance tool enables workers to borrow against their earned wages, and Walmart pays the fees.
Additional Resources
- Dialogue with the Fed: How Fintech is Transforming Banking
- On the Economy: Fintech: How Technology Is Changing Consumer and Small Business Lending
Source
https://www.stlouisfed.org/on-the-economy/2020/march/fintech-entrepreneurs-solve-problems
Disclaimer
Views expressed are not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis or of the Federal Reserve System.





