Fintech 2022
Legal certainty: the Achilles’ heel for CBDCs?
Many central banks lack legal certainty when it comes to issuing digital currencies. Isn’t it time to get the lawyers involved?
Fintech Benchmarks 2022 report – facing the tech test
Intelligence on internal fintech challenges at central banks as they contend with the fast-paced industry
Majority of central banks do not issue fintech licences
Lower-middle income jurisdictions more likely to issue licences than richer nations
Many central banks have a fintech strategy
Over half of respondents have a dedicated fintech team
Privacy and security are greatest cloud concerns
New computing options and work practice flexibility top benefits
SQL, Python and R top requirements for data scientists
Other staff may perform similar data analysis tasks
Data quality and staff skills are greatest AI challenges – benchmark respondents
Privacy and algorithmic fairness are also concerns
Half of fintech benchmarks respondents use AI/ML tools
Richer nations more likely to use artificial intelligence
Problem of recruiting and retaining fintech talent persists
Salaries a key issue alongside skill set attainment
Cyber security rises as fintech research priority
Suptech overtakes regtech
Sandbox popularity rises at central banks
Trend looks set to continue
Machine learning and NLP top regtech tools
Micro-prudential reporting and risk assessment are main regtech applications
Efficient data reporting is main suptech driver
Resource constraints are the biggest challenge in developing a suptech strategy
Majority of central banks lack legal authority to issue CBDC
Technical CBDC design has legal implications
Payments efficiency is driving force behind many CBDCs
Inclusion, financial stability and monetary policy are also leading factors