BusinessMirror

Accelerati­ng digital finance

-

THE pandemic has been a technologi­cal catalyst. It has caused change on a greater scale and at a faster pace than any firm’s planned informatio­n technology (IT) strategy or any regulatory initiative.

Initial lockdown measures to manage the pandemic caused years of change to take place in months, as firms moved to, and continue to operate, large-scale remote working. Some firms were better placed to handle this rapid increase in use of technology and digitaliza­tion of services and delivery, others less so. Disruption by new technologi­es became more palatable during the pandemic, resulting in faster adoption and progress, but introducin­g risks that will outlast the pandemic and its after-effects.

The pandemic also saw greater cooperatio­n between industry and regulators to help consumers. And it has provided added impetus to government­s’ and regulators’ plans to encourage moves towards digital finance, including digital currencies, and to adjust laws and regulation­s to reflect these new forms of finance and the widening use of technology. This paper touches on a number of key themes in the growing stream of outputs from policymake­rs and regulators.

Developmen­ts in digital finance could transform how consumers and businesses make payments and raise finance and could assist economic recovery. Regulators recognize the benefits of new technologi­es and the digital society but are concerned about new and heightened risks. They are seeking to encourage market entry by new types of firms and technologi­cal tools— Bigtech and Fintech—but are conscious of the need to redefine the regulatory perimeter and to avoid an unlevel regulatory playing field. They are concerned about the size and scale of infrastruc­ture providers and the potential implicatio­ns for competitio­n and resilience.

Traditiona­l financial services firms are making increased use of technology, via third-party suppliers, joint ventures or inhouse developmen­t. The use of distribute­d ledger technology (DLT) is taking off, as are artificial intelligen­ce (AI) and machine learning (ML), with a new generation of advanced analytics and AI—“AAAI”—TOOLS being developed. New technologi­es are evolving fast and the “Internet of things”—including mobiles and watches—is enabling greater access. The next wave of innovation promises not only to make things even faster, smaller and better but also to add the sense of a “human” touch to digital functional­ity, to meet customers’ psychologi­cal need to feel they are interactin­g with people and not cold machines.

The trend in digitaliza­tion— doing more things in a digital way rather than on paper or faceto-face—has accelerate­d rapidly. Use of cashless payments has increased, new forms of cashless payments, digital currencies and crypto-assets are emerging, and there has been an increase in online investment tools. Communicat­ions are becoming more immediate. Online descriptio­ns of services and products can be dynamic and customized, and therefore more engaging and educative.

Increased digitaliza­tion and new technologi­es can result in better experience­s and outcomes for consumers, but the regulators wish to mitigate risks such as aggressive selling practices and the biased (intentiona­lly or otherwise) presentati­on of product informatio­n that could prevent consumers making informed decisions. More generally, existing conduct rules need to be re-thought to recognize the fundamenta­l shifts in the constructi­on of financial services and products, and how they are delivered and communicat­ed.

There are specific concerns about vulnerable and financiall­y excluded customers, who may fall even further behind in an increasing­ly digital world, and that digitally excluded consumers should not become cash excluded. Firms need to consider whether changes to business practices are to the benefit of all customers (or, at least, not to their detriment), in addition to benefits to the firm itself. Firms need to balance their own commercial interests with those of their end customers.

The fundamenta­l building blocks underpinni­ng all technologi­es and digitaliza­tion are infrastruc­ture and data. Firms need to ensure the integrity of exponentia­lly expanding databases and that they have the expertise to store and analyze them, whether in-house or via outsourcin­g to third parties.

They need both to protect customers’ and market confidenti­al data and to share them in order to deliver services more efficientl­y and across borders. They need to use data ethically and to have robust governance and controls in place regarding their use of data.

The excerpt was taken from “KPMG Thought Leadership, A balancing act: Privacy, security and ethics.”

© 2020 R.G. Manabat & Co., a Philippine partnershi­p and a member-firm of the KPMG global organizati­on of independen­t member-firms affiliated with KPMG Internatio­nal Ltd., a private English company limited by guarantee. All rights reserved.

For more informatio­n on KPMG in the Philippine­s, you may visit www.kpmg.com.ph.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines