/payments

News and resources on payments systems, innovations and initiatives worldwide.

FSB bids to address legal, supervisory and regulatory frictions in cross-border payments

The Financial Stability Board (FSB) published today, for public consultation, its proposed recommendations to promote greater alignment in data frameworks related to cross-border payments and consistency in the regulation and supervision of bank and non-bank payment service providers.

Be the first to comment

External

This content is provided by an external author without editing by Finextra. It expresses the views and opinions of the author.

These reports take forward priority actions under the G20 Roadmap to address legal, supervisory and regulatory frictions in cross-border payments to help achieve the quantitative targets in 2027.

Policy recommendations to promote greater alignment and interoperability in data frameworks related to cross-border payments

The transfer of data across borders is essential to the functioning of the cross-border payments system. The FSB’s recommendations aim to address identified frictions from data frameworks (i.e. the range of laws, rules and regulatory requirements for collecting, storing and managing data) that pose significant challenges to improving the cost, speed, transparency and accessibility of cross-border payments, while maintaining their safety and security and upholding the objective of protecting the privacy of individuals. These frictions include the misalignment of data in payments that interferes with the smooth processing of cross-border payments, restrictions on data sharing that impede the ability to safely process cross-border payments, and increased costs due to data storage and handling requirements. To take forward these recommendations in a coordinated manner and to identify emerging issues that should be addressed, the FSB proposes the establishment of a forum comprised of public-sector stakeholders covering payments, anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT), sanctions, and data privacy and protection.

Policy recommendations to strengthen consistency in regulating and supervising banks and non-banks providing cross-border payment services

Advances in technology in the cross-border payments landscape have led to an increasing number and variety of payment services providers (PSPs) and the services they offer. In response to these changes, legal, regulatory and supervisory frameworks that govern PSPs have had to rapidly adapt and evolve. Due to the absence of comprehensive international standards applicable to non-bank PSPs’ provision of cross-border payment services, jurisdictions have taken varying approaches to regulating and supervising bank and non-bank PSPs. The proposed recommendations aim to ensure quality and consistency in the legal, regulatory and supervisory regimes for PSPs and to promote greater alignment between those applicable to banks and non-banks in their cross-border payment activities. This approach reduces the likelihood of regulatory arbitrage by establishing a level playing field for both banks and non-bank PSPs, despite differences in business models and risk profiles. Greater consistency in the treatment of payment services across PSPs supports an environment that reduces costs, increases delivery speed, and improves financial access and transparency.

The FSB is inviting comments on these consultation reports and the questions set out. Responses should be submitted by 9 September 2024.

Sponsored [Webinar] Payment Scams and Fraud: Changing Bank Behaviour and Regulatory Frameworks

Comments: (0)

[New Whitepaper] APIs, Automation, and AI: An Arsenal to Defend Against Card Transaction FraudFinextra Promoted[New Whitepaper] APIs, Automation, and AI: An Arsenal to Defend Against Card Transaction Fraud