FSB outlines next steps for enhancing cross-border payments

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Source: Financial Stability Board

The Financial Stability Board (FSB) today published the priority themes for the next phase of work under the G20 Roadmap for Enhancing Cross-Border Payments, two years after the Roadmap was launched.

The plan includes the practical steps to be taken to strengthen external engagement during this next phase of the work.

The FSB also published today a report on the progress made during the second year of the Roadmap, bringing together in one place the wide-ranging, interconnected work under the Roadmap’s different building blocks.

The two reports are being delivered to G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors for their meeting in Washington DC on 12-13 October 2022.

The initial work on the Roadmap in 2021 and 2022 has focused on laying the foundations, through the necessary stocktakes and analyses. The Roadmap has now reached an inflection point and needs to move to practical initiatives to enhance payment arrangements. The FSB, the Bank for International Settlements’ Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI) and partner bodies have therefore begun to focus and prioritise future work, drawing from the analysis to date and the feedback received from stakeholders.

Three priority themes have been identified for the Roadmap to focus on in the next phase:

Payment system interoperability and extension

Legal, regulatory and supervisory frameworks

Cross-border data exchange and message standards

Under this prioritisation, work will be focused on initiatives that help to achieve the Roadmap targets for enhancing the cost, speed, access and transparency of cross-border payments. By placing this at the centre of its planning, the public and private sector can direct resources toward the work most likely to have the biggest impact by the 2027 target date.

Strengthening engagement and partnership with the private sector will be a key element of the next phase of the Roadmap. Accompanying the work priorities is a plan to expand both the FSB’s systematic engagement with the private sector and its engagement with a wider range of public authorities. The FSB will hold a high-level Cross-border Payments Summit in October 2022 to launch this new phase of work under the Roadmap, bringing together leaders from both the private and public sector. The Summit’s aim will be to achieve a more specific joint public-private sector commitment to take forward the work to enhance cross-border payments.

Jon Cunliffe, Deputy Governor of the Bank of England, Chair of the CPMI and Co-Chair of the FSB Cross-border Payments Coordination Group (CPC) that coordinates the Roadmap said: “Over the past two years the FSB, working with the standard-setting bodies, have developed analysis and best practice on cross border payments. Today’s note on prioritisation and the way forward set out how these practical tools can be leveraged for action in support of the G20’s 2027 targets.”

Lesetja Kganyago, Governor of the South African Reserve Bank, the other Co-Chair of the CPC, said: “We look forward to collaboration among a wide range of bodies, for the next stage of work, including both payments industry participants and a wider range of public sector authorities, beyond the FSB member jurisdictions.”

Financial Services

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