This paper precedes the European Commission’s framework for data access in financial services which is due to be published in the coming months as announced by the EU’s chief of financial policy, Mairead McGuinness.
The Association for Financial Markets in Europe (AFME) has today published a new paper “Open Finance and Data Sharing – Building Blocks for a Competitive, Innovative and Secure Framework”.
Elise Soucie, Associate Director of Technology and Operations at AFME, said: “Open
Finance in the EU’s data economy will transform the way banks share
data with each other, and also with third-party providers, such as
fintech companies. For financial services this could mean that access to
new, broader data sets could enhance the way banks operate and
encourage innovation across sectors.
“But with
innovation comes potential for unintended consequences such as sharing
data with participants in other sectors who may already have a dominant
share of both individual and corporate data and which could lead to
monopolies and the exploitation of data. Therefore AFME has identified
four key principles to help address these risks and to support policy
makers in the development of a robust Open Finance Framework.”
The paper identifies four key principles to support the development of a robust Open Finance Framework, including:
- A level playing field is crucial
- In order for an
Open Finance Framework to flourish not only in financial services but
across multiple sectors, there must be consistent and appropriate
regulatory oversight.
- This
consistency is key in order to both support innovation, but also to
discourage monopolies, encourage competition and efficiency, and to
lower costs for both corporate and retail customers, creating a robust
and effective data economy.
- For this to
occur, regulation must address risks consistently and market players
must have consistent regulation if data is to be shared across the
sectors.
- Interoperability and an appropriate level of standardisation
- A robust data
economy and its positive long-term impacts will be supported by both
interoperability and an appropriate level of standardisation on a global
scale.
- Interoperability
should also support a level playing field so that, if data is being
shared outside the financial services sector, it is still subject to
appropriate requirements and remains high quality and fit for purpose.
- Furthermore,
any harmonisation would also need to occur across EU Member States,
while also being complementary to global frameworks. This
interoperability could be supported through a market-led forum that
could support the implementation of both principle-based standards and
technical and security standards where appropriate.
- An appropriate framework for compensation
- Compensation is
important in order to ensure fair allocation of costs across the data
value chain and to safeguard fair competition.
- Compensation,
for infrastructure and provision of data services is also important to
incentivise data holders to maintain a high level of quality and high
functioning data sharing mechanisms.
- Ensuring that
each type of data is supported by an appropriate data sharing
infrastructure enables data to be fit for purpose and reliable when
used.
- Data
reliability also supports a robust data economy and mitigates risks to
data integrity, data security, regulatory compliance and the accuracy of
end products for both corporate and retail consumers.
- Clear liability provisions
- Liability
provisions are important in order to provide legal clarity with respect
to the access, processing, sharing, and storage of data.
- These
provisions should be consistent with the GDPR and should also include
specifications on redress and dispute resolution as well as consent
mechanisms for consent beyond the usage of the data controller.
- In addition to
the Open Finance Framework setting out liability provisions, it should
also support and enable contractual agreements as these are crucial to
fill any gaps in new use cases, or specialised scenarios which may
require additional clarity on the legal, technical and other conditions
governing data sharing.
AFME
© AFME
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