The German Banking Industry Committee advocates gearing it to the actual needs of customers and giving banks more scope for innovation. In its current form, the directive is hindering progress in these areas and setting the wrong incentives for the market.  
      
    
    
      The European Commission has begun its review of the Revised Payment 
Services Directive (PSD2). 
When the PSD2 came into force in 2018, its aim was to promote 
competition and allow the utilisation of financial data from payments. 
To achieve this, banks were obliged to give new service providers access
 to their customer interfaces, among other things. From the German 
Banking Industry Committee’s point of view, these generally positive 
aims were not achieved. Rather, certain products and business models 
enjoyed unilateral privileges. Account servicing institutions were 
obligated to support them – regardless of whether they met the 
individual needs of their customers or not. 
Christian Ossig, Chief Executive of the Association of German Banks, 
which is currently coordinating the German Banking Industry Committee, 
said, “The banking industry has created a secure European market for 
offers in the payments market which are geared to the needs of 
customers. The legislator must allow more scope for further developments
 and innovation. These could be implemented as collaborations between 
banks and other payments service providers. But more unilateral burdens 
on account servicing institutions would be counterproductive.”
In a position paper, the German banking associations advocate 
maintaining stability in the regulatory environment for payments in the 
coming years. The European Commission should bear in mind the success 
and beneficial approach of the first European Payment Services Directive
 (PSD1) and make amendments based on the actual needs of the market. For
 example, contractual information requirements should be streamlined and
 simplified for customers, and they should take into account the 
opportunities provided by digital means of communication. The specific 
product requirements of corporate clients and their higher degree of 
professionalism should also be given greater prominence and more 
flexibility.
BDB
      
      
      
      
        © BDB - Bundesverband Deutscher Banken
     
      
      
      
      
      
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