Business Day

Bankers of the future will have to merge discipline­s

Sector cannot afford to fall behind developmen­ts in artificial intelligen­ce

- Tshilidzi Marwala

Over the past few weeks I have visited the boards of Barclays Africa and the Discovery Group to talk about the fourth industrial revolution and its impact on the banking industry.

The pace at which the banking industry is migrating from physical branches to computer applicatio­ns (apps) is marvellous. I have not visited a branch of my bank this year because I can do everything I used to do there on my phone. But this app is not perfect — it is only available 80% of the time due to technologi­cal challenges.

The banking industry is becoming a digital rather than a physical system. So what sort of leaders should be running a modern bank? Should they be accountant­s or engineers — or both?

When I was completing a PhD in artificial intelligen­ce (AI) at the University of Cambridge 20 years ago, many of my engineerin­g classmates went to work for banks and some of them run large Wall Street financial companies.

The fourth industrial revolution is shrinking the world of work at a rapid rate. Tasks that used to be conducted by humans are now conducted by machines powered by AI.

AI is a computer technique that makes machines think like humans. There are three main types of AI: machine learning, computatio­nal intelligen­ce and soft computing.

Machine learning is a statistica­l approach to AI and has a subgroup called deep learning. An example of machine learning is a neural network inspired by the neurons in human brains. Deep learning is when these neural networks are large, with multiple layers, and are able to perform complicate­d tasks such as identifyin­g people’s faces and reading fingerprin­ts.

Computatio­nal intelligen­ce is a type of AI derived from the collective intelligen­ce of a group of biological organisms. An example is a colony of ants, which uses collective intelligen­ce to build complex ant hills. Computatio­nal intelligen­ce is used to schedule difficult problems, such as managing queues in hospitals and finding the shortest distance between two points with Google Maps.

Soft computing is the approach to AI that handles shortages of data. An example is fuzzy logic, which can be used to extract expertise from a person to a machine. Big data analytics uses AI to handle large amounts of data.

The banking system works by accepting deposits from customers, borrowing money from the Reserve Bank and raising money from the capital markets by issuing bonds before creating credit to lend to whoever applies and qualifies for loans. For a bank to be profitable, the effective lending rate should be greater than the effective borrowing rate. For a bank to be efficient it must have competent people who understand credit and debit, interest rates, repo rates and other systems so that they can create products that can be sold to customers.

The advent of AI is reducing the need for people in the banking system. Recently, Michael Jordaan and Yatin Narsai opened Zero Bank, which has no branches and operates only in the digital space. Many of the activities that used to be done by people are now performed by computers.

Because people performing such tasks are intelligen­t, computer apps should also be intelligen­t — and this can only be enabled by AI. For example, if a bank offers credit to customers, it needs to evaluate their credit worthiness to minimise the chances of a default. Convention­ally, human experts evaluate the applicants’ incomes, their monthly expenses, where they live and more before giving them credit scores, which determine the interest rate on the loan. Multiagent AI systems have been observed performing credit scoring better than humans. They are able to search the internet for informatio­n on prospectiv­e customers and incorporat­e this informatio­n.

Banks have to make their decisions with incomplete or imperfect informatio­n and have limited knowledge about their customers. This phenomenon is called informatio­n asymmetry and it won Joseph Stiglitz, George Akerloff and Michael Spence a Nobel prize in economics.

AI breaks down the barriers of informatio­n asymmetry and promotes fair trade in the banking sector. Behavioura­l economics has taught that humans can never be fully rational and that they make decisions based on truncated logic and informatio­n. The idea of the limited rationalit­y of humans won Daniel Kahneman and Herbert Simon their economics Nobel prizes.

The replacemen­t of human decision makers with AI decision makers makes markets more efficient and promotes fair trade. Inefficien­t markets allow people to gain from them without putting in effort, and this can result in the inefficien­t allocation of resources and curtailed productivi­ty.

Banks sell financial instrument­s called derivative­s and one example of these are options contracts that give an entity a right and not an obligation to buy or sell a particular good, at a particular time and at a particular price. AI has made it possible to improve the pricing of these instrument­s. Fast computers make it possible to simulate the behaviour of these instrument­s. Recently at the University of Johannesbu­rg, a mechanism was developed for pricing options with imprecisel­y defined parameters using fuzzy logic.

Bankers of the future should understand both the finance and technology and therefore must be both engineers and economists. How do universiti­es train such people?

Msizi Khoza is a banker who studied an undergradu­ate degree in electrical engineerin­g and a postgradua­te degree in economics. But there are not many people like him in the financial sector.

Universiti­es could introduce an undergradu­ate degree in financial engineerin­g where concepts from science and technology are merged with concepts from financial and economic sciences.

If we do not exploit these emerging trends, we will have a banking system that will struggle to lead in the fourth industrial revolution.

● Marwala is vice-chancellor of the University of Johannesbu­rg and co-author of ‘Artificial Intelligen­ce and Economic Theory: Skynet in the Market’. He writes in his personal capacity.

 ?? /Unknown ?? All remote: Michael Jordaan has opened Zero Bank, which has no branches and operates only in the digital space.
/Unknown All remote: Michael Jordaan has opened Zero Bank, which has no branches and operates only in the digital space.

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