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REGULATION FOR INCLUSIVE DIGITAL FINANCE

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An Enabling Regulatory Framework is Critical for Financial Inclusion

Digital financial services (DFS) have become the leading driver of inclusion for the unbanked around the world, particularly in developing countries. What makes this possible is not only innovation in products and technology but regulation. A complex set of rules underlies the ability of ordinary people to access financial services conveniently and safely through a few simple steps at the point of service – usually a mobile phone or a shop. For this to happen, legislators and central bankers must ensure that regulations in such areas as banking, payments, consumer protection, and anti-money laundering fit together to form an enabling framework.

How can regulation enable DFS for inclusive finance? First, a legal basis is necessary for a range of providers to serve the underbanked and unbanked, using a variety of delivery channels. These may include bank and nonbank providers as well as networks of agents – each with distinct strengths in serving clients across the country. Second, regulation supplies the mechanism for dealing collectively with the risks that DFS pose to customers and the financial system. Third, the way in which DFS-specific rules are developed and applied can (and should) accommodate innovation while promoting safety. The ideal is a balanced or proportionate regulatory system that enables and protects but avoids imposing undue compliance costs on (often low-margin) DFS providers.

The Four Basic Enablers

What steps can regulators take to promote financial inclusion through digital financial services?  Based on its work in 10 countries in Africa and Asia, CGAP has identified four building blocks for creating an enabling and safe DFS regulatory framework.

E-Money Issuance by Nonbanks

A basic enabling condition for DFS is a special licensing window for nonbank e-money issuers (EMIs). Like banks, EMIs collect funds from customers based on a promise to repay, but EMIs cannot extend credit or engage in risky banking operations. Hence, EMIs have a much lower risk profile than banks and require less oversight. They issue e-money accounts free from many of the prudential safeguards applied to traditional banks. This opens the DFS market to new providers such as mobile network operators (MNOs) and specialized payment services providers (PSPs), which are often more successful in reaching the mass market. The EMIs store customer funds converted into e-money (“e-float”) in basic transaction accounts, but are not authorized to intermediate those funds. Special rules are needed to protect the e-float – e.g. requiring fund isolation and investment in safe, liquid assets.

Use of Agents

Retail agents make inclusive DFS possible and are therefore a key focus of enabling regulation. Providers use agents – third parties such as retail shops – to provide customers with easy access to their services close to where they live, thus expanding their outreach at low cost. The sheer number of these agents poses a challenge for regulatory oversight. Regulation targets the licensed DFS provider, which is legally responsible for actions taken on its behalf by agents. Supervisors assess providers’ systems for monitoring agents, e.g. internal controls and risk management practices. Another issue of concern to regulators is setting eligibility standards – who can become an agent (or a certain type of agent) and what qualifications are required. The question also arises of uniform versus differentiated standards for DFS agents. Frequently, agency rules are adopted piecemeal, so that agents dealing with different types of providers, accounts, or activities may have separate and distinct rules.

Risk-Based Customer Due Diligence 

DFS operates within regulatory contexts shaped by policies on anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT). Proportionate AML/CFT frameworks use a risk-based approach to protect the integrity of the system while imposing the least burden on DFS outreach. This means allowing simplified customer due diligence (CDD) for lower-risk accounts and transactions, as recommended by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) in its international guidance. Applying this approach eases providers’ costs of customer acquisition and ongoing transaction monitoring while bringing more people into the formal financial sector. A common risk-based approach is to create risk tiers in which CDD procedures of varying intensity are applied. The tiers are tied to the kinds of accounts or transactions provided, the types of clients, and the modalities of account opening and transacting (e.g., in-person or not). In the meantime, advances in ID systems in several countries are reducing cost and risk, while expanding inclusion.n Antony, 2017 CGAP Photo Contest

Consumer Protection

In order to drive financial inclusion, DFS must cultivate trust and reliability, and this, in turn, depends on effective financial consumer protection (FCP). Absent such protection, services may expand, but achieving a sustainable, inclusive market over the long term would be difficult. Transparency and disclosure requirements are core features of FCP, along with standards of fair dealing. Accountability to customers and regulators demands that each provider set up a system for handling customer complaints. Further, electronic transactions pose some special risks to consumers. Providing certainty here requires standards of digital platform reliability and protection against mistaken or unauthorized transactions. The growth of DFS models based on massive collection and exploitation of customer data has also prompted regulation dealing with the protection of customer data, restrictions on its use, and localization of storage. Last, as with agent regulations, FCP rules are not always consistent for different providers and products.

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