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The bill will serve as the legal foundation for the European Central
Bank’s ongoing technical work on the creation of a central bank digital
currency. On instant payments, the proposed legislative changes are
intended to address the fragmented market for cross-border real-time
payments and provide a spur to Open Banking initiatives across the
Union.
While details are scarce, EU commisioner for financial
services Mairead McGuinness told a conference that the new rules are
required to accelerate the roll-out of instant payments in the EU.
Joe Morley, GM for Europe at TrueLayer, welcomed the news: "This can't happen soon enough with so much efficiency currently being lost due to the lack of a coherent implementation of Sepa Instant Payments in the EU. It needs to be ubiquitous and become the default option. There is no compelling reason why this cannot be the case when the solution exists - to date it's been an adoption problem. European business deserves better and this is an easy win-win for cross border competitiveness within the EU - both for merchants and consumers."Today I’m confirming the Commission will present a legislative initiative on instant payments in the second half of 2022 💶
— Mairead McGuinness (@McGuinnessEU)
We need this to accelerate the roll-out of instant payments in the EU.