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Hauptverfasser: Yuwono, Elizabeth Irenne, Tjondronegoro, Dian, Hunter, Shawn, Marshall, Amber
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2025
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.12212
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author Yuwono, Elizabeth Irenne
Tjondronegoro, Dian
Hunter, Shawn
Marshall, Amber
author_facet Yuwono, Elizabeth Irenne
Tjondronegoro, Dian
Hunter, Shawn
Marshall, Amber
contents Financial exclusion remains a major barrier to digital public service delivery in resource-constrained and archipelagic nations. Traditional policy evaluations rely on retrospective data, limiting the ex-ante intelligence needed for agile resource allocation. This study introduces a predictive simulation framework to support anticipatory governance within government information systems. Using the UNCDF Pacific Digital Economy dataset of 10,108 respondents, we apply a three-stage pipeline: descriptive profiling, interpretable machine learning, and scenario simulation to forecast outcomes of digital financial literacy interventions before deployment. Leveraging cross-sectional structural associations, the framework projects intervention scenarios as prioritization heuristics rather than causal estimates. A transparent linear regression model with R-squared of 95.9 identifies modifiable policy levers. Simulations indicate that foundational digital capabilities such as device access and expense tracking yield the highest projected gains, up to 5.5 percent, outperforming attitudinal nudges. The model enables precision targeting, highlighting young female caregivers as high-leverage responders while flagging non-responders such as urban professionals to prevent resource misallocation. This research demonstrates how static survey data can be repurposed into actionable policy intelligence, offering a scalable and evidence-based blueprint for embedding predictive analytics into public-sector decision-support systems to advance equity-focused digital governance.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_12212
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Anticipatory Governance in Data-Constrained Environments: A Predictive Simulation Framework for Digital Financial Inclusion
Yuwono, Elizabeth Irenne
Tjondronegoro, Dian
Hunter, Shawn
Marshall, Amber
Computers and Society
General Economics
Economics
Applications
H.0; K.4
Financial exclusion remains a major barrier to digital public service delivery in resource-constrained and archipelagic nations. Traditional policy evaluations rely on retrospective data, limiting the ex-ante intelligence needed for agile resource allocation. This study introduces a predictive simulation framework to support anticipatory governance within government information systems. Using the UNCDF Pacific Digital Economy dataset of 10,108 respondents, we apply a three-stage pipeline: descriptive profiling, interpretable machine learning, and scenario simulation to forecast outcomes of digital financial literacy interventions before deployment. Leveraging cross-sectional structural associations, the framework projects intervention scenarios as prioritization heuristics rather than causal estimates. A transparent linear regression model with R-squared of 95.9 identifies modifiable policy levers. Simulations indicate that foundational digital capabilities such as device access and expense tracking yield the highest projected gains, up to 5.5 percent, outperforming attitudinal nudges. The model enables precision targeting, highlighting young female caregivers as high-leverage responders while flagging non-responders such as urban professionals to prevent resource misallocation. This research demonstrates how static survey data can be repurposed into actionable policy intelligence, offering a scalable and evidence-based blueprint for embedding predictive analytics into public-sector decision-support systems to advance equity-focused digital governance.
title Anticipatory Governance in Data-Constrained Environments: A Predictive Simulation Framework for Digital Financial Inclusion
topic Computers and Society
General Economics
Economics
Applications
H.0; K.4
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.12212