The FinTech Working Group convened for the fifth time and
welcomed invitees Nouriel Roubini, Professor of Economics at New York
University’s Stern School of Business, Jorg Kukies, State Secretary at
the German Federal Ministry of Finance and Stuart Levey, CEO of Diem
(formerly the Libra Association). Discussion focused on crypto-assets
and their regulation in the EU.
MEPs also asked whether the ECB should
accelerate its digital currency project. In light of actions by third
countries and big tech, MEPs emphasised the need to curb
anti-competitive behaviour and take active measures to prevent foreign
players from dominating the financial services and e-commerce sectors,
as well as restricting their access to the personal financial data of EU
citizens. Consequently, unregulated stablecoins may threaten financial
stability and consumer protection. Participants asked numerous questions
on how to establish a prudential regulatory framework, which would
tackle abuses, preserve the level playing field, and boost innovation.
Background information
In recent years, EU and global financial
supervisory and regulatory institutions have created units to study
developments and trends in the diverse financial technologies (FinTech)
sector. In light of this, the FinTech Working Group was established by
the Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee (ECON) at the end of 2019
and is chaired by Stasys JAKELIŪNAS (Greens/EFA, LT) with MEPs from most political groups.
Main goals
- Better understand FinTech complexities, potential benefits and risks
- Monitor developments
- Help ECON members make informed decisions
- Help ECON members in deliberation of recent legislative proposals from the European Commission in the digital finance sector
Meetings organised
Five group meeting have now taken place
in which a number of institutions have been represented including: the
European Commission, the European Central Bank, the Bank for
International Settlements, the Financial Stability Institute, the
Sveriges Riksbank (the central bank of Sweden), and the BEUC. Economists
from academia have already contributed to group discussions and will
continue to do so.
Key issues being discussed
- Significant benefits, risks and synergies in various FinTech areas.
- Regulatory and supervisory awareness and readiness for FinTech developments.
Are there risks of supervisory
competition and regulatory arbitrage with regards to FinTech –
especially at member state level – and if so, how are they dealt with in
order to preserve the integrity of the EU single financial market? Is
FinTech sometimes used to avoid increased regulatory requirements in
matters of capital, know-your-customer (KYC), anti-money-laundering
(AML) and other areas and how can this be prevented?
Are consumers well protected against
innovative and potentially aggressive and manipulative advertising and
sales techniques used by some of the FinTech companies? Is business
conduct supervision capable of dealing with these risks at the EU and
national levels?
What are the potential benefits, risks,
and implications of BigTech (Google, Facebook and others)
entering/merging with FinTech for EU and global financial stability,
monetary sovereignty, and policy transmission?
What are the possibilities and risks of existent and developing crypto-assets, and how to best regulate them?
What is the status of Central Bank
Digital Currency projects that are being actively developed in the EU
and globally? What implications might they have for payment and banking
systems, as well for financial stability and monetary policy
transmission efficiency?
The Group web page includes summaries of the meetings and material presented by the speakers.