

MIT
2025 Global Economic Prosperity Challenge








Description
The rapid development of technologies like AI offers new capabilities and creates new opportunities, yet significant global disparities persist: 2.6 billion people remain offline, 1.4 billion are unbanked and two billion work in informal economies. These challenges are particularly acute for vulnerable communities and women when digital access and verifiable identification are prerequisites for modern financial services. Financial providers often lack incentives to expand services to underserved markets, while factors such as limited technological literacy, institutional mistrust, and local cultural practices can impede the adoption of digital tools. Addressing economic opportunity gaps requires a coordinated approach to overcome barriers to digital access, financial services, and labor market participation.Technology and innovation can be powerful levers to close these gaps through targeted solutions; whether by offering targeted financial tools to unbanked populations, enabling communication across language barriers through real-time translation, and creating adaptable interfaces that accommodate diverse user needs and abilities in employment contexts. When designed and deployed responsibly, these innovations can address specific community needs while scaling to create more accessible financial systems, expand qualified workforce participation, and strengthen economic resilience against disruptions from conflict, climate change, and financial instability. MIT Solve seeks exceptional technology-driven solutions to increase economic prosperity for all with a 2025 focus on solutions that:Enable universal access to financial services, including innovative fintech tools for banking, insurance, credit, instant payments, and asset ownership.Increase digital participation and security, including reliable connectivity and protected online spaces that safeguard civic participation, privacy, and digital identity.Expand workforce development, such as through skill-based training, employment matching, and career mobility programs, or worker safety and benefits, with an emphasis on underinvested populations.
All Solver teams selected for Solve’s Global Challenges and the Indigenous Communities Fellowship will receive a $10,000 grant funded by Solve.
What is the time commitment?
Selected Solver teams should expect to commit ~25 hours to the program over the course of nine months, inclusive of coaching sessions, workshops, virtual events, etc. Additionally, attendance to MIT Solve flagship events is usually four days for Solve Challenge Finals in New York City (September) and four days for Solve at MIT in Cambridge (May).
Think you have what it takes but not sure you check every box? Research shows that while men apply to roles when they meet an average of 60% of the criteria, women often only apply when they meet every requirement. If you are hesitating, apply!