Governments, financial regulators and firms should step up their efforts to work together to address the challenges of developing and deploying trustworthy artificial intelligence (AI) in the financial sector, according to a new OECD report.
      
    
    
      The OECD  Business and Finance Outlook 2021
 says that investment in AI finance is on the rise. The financial and 
insurance sector has consistently been within the top 10 industries in 
terms of the amount of VC investments in AI start-ups, investing over 
USD 4 billion worldwide in 2020. Almost 65% of VC investments in the 
sector went to American AI start-ups.
As AI applications become increasingly integrated into 
business and finance, the use of trustworthy AI will become increasingly
 important for ensuring trustworthy financial markets, says the report.
AI has the potential to facilitate transactions, enhance
 market efficiency, reinforce financial stability, promote greater 
financial inclusion and improve customer experience. But AI also raises 
unique challenges to privacy, autonomy, transparency and accountability,
 which are particularly complex in the financial sector, according to 
the Outlook.
Critically, increasingly complex AI algorithms that are 
difficult, or even impossible, to explain could amplify existing risks 
in financial markets or give rise to new risks.
Transparency, fairness, data governance and 
accountability are key to managing risk as determinants of trustworthy 
AI. Failing to foster these qualities in AI systems could lead to the 
introduction of biases generating discriminatory and unfair results, 
market convergence and herding behaviour or the concentration of markets
 by dominant players, which can all undermine market integrity and 
stability.  
Existing financial regulations may fall short of 
addressing systemic risks presented by wide-scale adoption of AI-based 
FinTech by financial firms, says the report.
These conditions have led to a critical juncture for the
 deployment of AI applications in business and finance, according to the
 Oulook. Financial regulators are grappling with whether and how to 
adapt existing rules, or create new ones, to keep pace with 
technological advances in AI applications, while striking the right 
balance between managing risks and supporting innovation.
At the international level, the 
OECD  AI Principles,
 adopted in May 2019, became the first international standard agreed by 
governments for the responsible stewardship of trustworthy AI. The OECD,
 together with international partners working to support financial 
markets and financial sustainability, must reinforce efforts to 
facilitate multilateral engagement on implementing the Principles in the
 context of financial markets and other business sectors.
OECD
      
      
      
      
        © OECD
     
      
      
      
      
      
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