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Singapore central bank chief warns of risks to data localisati­on measures

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SINGAPORE: Concerted moves by countries to force companies to store data locally poses a risk to the growth of the digital economy, Singapore’s central bank chief said.

“We need more data connectivi­ty, and less data localisati­on. This is a serious risk,” Ravi Menon, managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore told the opening session of the Singapore FinTech festival, which is expected to draw over 40,000 participan­ts from 100 countries over three days.

“Data localisati­on measures are on the rise around the world. If data cannot cross borders, the digital economy cannot cross borders and we will be poorer for it,” Menon, sporting a red shirt and blue jeans, told a 3,500-strong crowd at a convention and exhibition centre in the city-state.

Singapore’s showcase fintech event brings together investors, regulators, entreprene­urs and technology executives who will traverse a myriad of topics including artificial intelligen­ce in finance and cyber security. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is set to speak at the conference later this week.

Digital borders are a growing global issue in an era where big companies operate so-called cloud networks of giant data centres, meaning an individual’s data can reside anywhere.

Financial and technology companies have found themselves torn between protecting consumers’ privacy and cooperatin­g with law enforcemen­t.

“Not all data localisati­on is bad: there may be some legitimate concerns about national security. But a good part of data localisati­on that is happening in the world today is due to misguided notions of cyber security or data privacy or, worse still, old-fashioned protection­ism,” said Menon.

A number of other countries in Asia and elsewhere are pursuing data localisati­on laws as they seek greater control over the Internet.

This month, Vietnam released a draft decree on guidelines to implement a cybersecur­ity law that global tech companies and rights groups have said could undermine developmen­t and stifle innovation.

And in October, global card payments giant Mastercard said it is storing its new Indian transactio­n data locally, as it starts to comply with a regulatory directive which US companies unsuccessf­ully lobbied hard to dilute.

“We need common data standards across countries so data can flow freely in an environmen­t of trust and security,” Menon said.

“In the digital economy of the future, data connectivi­ty agreements among countries will become as important as today’s free trade agreements.”

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