Taking for granted the ability to withdraw money from our bank account, wire it to family in another country, and pay bills online.... But what if a cyberattack takes the bank down and a remittance doesn’t go through?
      
    
    
      As we become increasingly reliant on digital financial services, the 
number of cyberattacks has tripled over the last decade, and financial 
services continue to be the most targeted industry. Cybersecurity has 
clearly become a threat to financial stability.
Given strong financial and technological interconnections, a 
successful attack on a major financial institution, or on a core system 
or service used by many, could quickly spread through the entire 
financial system causing widespread disruption and loss of confidence. 
Transactions could fail as liquidity is trapped, household and companies
 could lose access to deposits and payments. Under extreme scenarios, 
investors and depositors may demand their funds or try to cancel their 
accounts or other services and products they regularly use.
Hacking tools are now cheaper, simpler and more powerful, allowing 
lower-skilled hackers to do more damage at a fraction of the previous 
cost. The expansion of mobile-based services (the only technological 
platform available for many people), increases the opportunities for 
hackers. Attackers target large and small institutions, rich and poor 
countries, and operate without borders. Fighting cybercrime and reducing
 risk must therefore be a shared undertaking across and inside 
countries.

While the daily foundational risk management work — maintaining 
networks, updating software and enforcing strong ‘cyber hygiene’ — 
remains with financial institutions, there is also a need to address 
common challenges and recognize the spillovers and interconnections 
across the financial system. Individual firm incentives to invest in 
protection are not enough; regulation and public policy intervention is 
needed to guard against underinvestment and protect the broader 
financial system from the consequences of an attack.
In our view, many national financial systems are not yet ready to 
manage attacks, while international coordination is still weak. In new IMF  staff research, we suggest six major strategies that would considerably strengthen cybersecurity and improve financial stability worldwide.
Cyber mapping and risk quantification
The global financial system’s interdependencies can be better 
understood by mapping key operational and technological interconnections
 and critical infrastructure. Better incorporating cyber risk into 
financial stability analysis will improve the ability to understand and 
mitigate system-wide risk. Quantifying the potential impact will help 
focus the response and promote stronger commitment to the issue. Work in
 this area is nascent—in part due to data shortcomings on the impact of 
cyber events and modelling challenges—but must be accelerated to reflect
 its growing importance.
Converging regulation
More internationally consistent regulation and supervision will 
reduce compliance costs and build a platform for stronger cross-border 
cooperation. International bodies such as the Financial Stability Board,
 Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructure, and Basel Committee, 
have begun to strengthen coordination and foster convergence. National 
authorities need to work together on implementation.
Capacity to respond
As cyberattacks become increasingly common, the financial system has 
to be able to resume operations quickly even in the face of a successful
 attack, safeguarding stability. So-called response and recovery 
strategies are still incipient, particularly in low-income countries, 
which need support in developing them. International arrangements are 
necessary to support response and recovery in cross-border institutions 
and services.
Willingness to share
More information-sharing on threats, attacks, and responses across 
the private and the public sectors will enhance the ability to deter and
 respond effectively. Yet, serious barriers remain, often stemming from 
national security concerns and data protection laws. Supervisors and 
central banks need to develop information sharing protocols and 
practices that work effectively within these constraints. A globally 
agreed template for information sharing, increased use of common 
information platforms, and expansion of trusted networks could all 
reduce barriers.
Stronger deterrence
Cyberattacks should become more expensive and riskier through 
effective measures to confiscate crime proceeds and prosecute criminals.
 Stepping up international efforts to prevent, disrupt and deter 
attackers would reduce the threat at its source. This requires strong 
co-operation between law enforcement agencies and national authorities 
responsible for critical infrastructure or security, across countries 
and agencies. Since hackers know no borders, global crime requires 
global enforcement.
Capacity development
Helping developing and emerging economies build cybersecurity 
capacity will strengthen financial stability and support financial 
inclusion. Low-income countries are particularly vulnerable to cyber 
risk. The COVID-19 crisis has highlighted the decisive role that 
connectivity plays in the developing world. Harnessing technology safely
 and securely will continue to be central to development and with it a 
need to ensure that cyber risk is addressed. As with any virus, the 
proliferation of cyber threats in any given country makes the rest of 
the world less safe.
Addressing all these gaps will require a collaborative effort from 
standard-setting bodies, national regulators, supervisors, industry 
associations, private sector, law enforcement, international 
organizations, and other capacity development providers and donors. The 
IMF  is focusing its efforts on low-income countries, by providing 
capacity development to financial supervisors, and by bringing the 
issues and perspectives of these countries to the international bodies 
and policy discussions in which they are not adequately represented.
IMF
      
      
      
      
        © International Monetary Fund
     
      
      
      
      
      
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