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Dutch Queen Launches New Regulatory Knowledge-Sharing Platform

December 6, 2022
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With backing from the UN, the UK government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Queen M谩xima and colleagues are fashioning a global network for regulatory expertise through the University of Cambridge.

With backing from the UN, the UK government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Queen M谩xima and colleagues are fashioning a global network for regulatory expertise through the University of Cambridge.

The Netherlands鈥 Queen M谩xima has launched a new knowledge-sharing platform for financial regulators, in an effort to promote international coordination on digital finance issues.

The Regulator Knowledge Exchange (RKE) platform is backed by the Cambridge Center for Alternative Finance (CCAF) at the University of Cambridge and by the United Nations (UN) through Queen M谩xima.

Since 2009, Queen M谩xima as the UN Secretary-General's Special Advocate for Inclusive Finance for Development (UNSGSA).

鈥淥ver the last decade, I鈥檝e witnessed the remarkable progress that digital financial services and digital public infrastructure can bring,鈥 Queen M谩xima during a speech to market the launch.

鈥淵et to reach the next level, more work is needed.鈥

Quoting , Queen M谩xima said that, since 2011, a quarter of the world鈥檚 adult population has gained access to financial services and three quarters of adults globally are now 鈥渇inancially included鈥.

However, UN data also shows that three out of five mobile money accounts are 鈥渋nactive or dormant鈥, and the use of savings, borrowing and insurance via mobile platforms remains limited.

鈥淔or these services to be truly impactful, they should meet customers鈥 needs, actively help build their financial health and enable them to seize economic opportunities,鈥 said Queen M谩xima.

Elsewhere in her speech, Queen M谩xima went on to highlight the work of fintechs in developing countries that have helped to bring financial services to small businesses and the unbanked.

ShopUp in Bangladesh, Flutterwave in Nigeria and Bazaar in Pakistan were mentioned by name as helping entrepreneurs to digitise their inventory management, marketing, payments, credit and sales processes.

鈥淭his has helped small businesses expand far beyond their brick-and-mortar origins and connect to a much wider world,鈥 she said.

鈥淏ut these innovations require new regulatory tools, both to foster positive outcomes and to address risks 鈥 such as cyberattacks, privacy breaches, bigtech domination and algorithm bias.

鈥淢any countries lack the resources and skills to assess and balance the risks and opportunities. That is why the work of the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance is so valuable.鈥

Focus on nurturing innovation

Queen M谩xima said that one of the exchange鈥檚 priorities will be nurturing innovation in areas such as digital ID using a regulatory sandbox approach.

鈥淩egulators need to be open to innovation,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd there are a range of options to do this, depending on experience and resources.

鈥淲hile improving the regulatory environment is crucial, for digital finance to thrive, we also need supportive policies and infrastructure.鈥

Alongside digital ID, Queen M谩xima said that fair competition frameworks and interoperable payment systems will help increase access to financial services for individuals and businesses.

She added that cybersecurity, data governance and digital literacy can help protect marginalised communities who are becoming banked and using digital financial services for the first time.

鈥淪o let us share this knowledge, and working alongside international institutions, go the extra mile,鈥 she said.

鈥淭ogether, we have a unique opportunity to build an inclusive digital financial sector, with the real power to improve people鈥檚 lives.鈥

Background to Regulator Knowledge Exchange

In February, the Regulator Knowledge Exchange , having spun off from a course that Cambridge University was teaching, and continues to teach, on fintech and regulatory innovation.

At the launch of the pilot scheme, the Regulator Knowledge Exchange was described as a 鈥渢rusted digital platform鈥 for regulators to collaborate and coordinate more closely.

鈥淭he platform is envisaged to facilitate peer-learning, knowledge exchange, policy transfer, and collective problem-solving among the global regulatory community on key issues,鈥 its founders said in a statement.

The pilot was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office, a new ministry formed in 2020 following the merger of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) and the Department for International Development (DFID).

As explained during the pilot launch, the Regulator Knowledge Exchange was initially created to support the growing alumni community of the .

鈥淧eer-learning and knowledge exchange are hallmarks of the CFTRI, which aims to increase the capacity of financial regulators and supervisors to regulate fintech activities and more effectively develop regulatory innovation initiatives,鈥 it said.

鈥淭he Regulator Knowledge Exchange is an extension of the classroom and provides a trusted and user-friendly digital platform for regulators to learn, discuss, engage, collaborate and coordinate.鈥

When the pilot was announced in February, the CCAF said it already had more than 600 regulators in 90 jurisdictions who had signed up to take part.

鈥淩egulators are facing common challenges in their response to the speed at which fintech is developing and its increasing complexity,鈥 said Dr Robert Wardrop, director and co-founder of the CCAF.

鈥淭he support provided by the Gates Foundation enables us to take the RKE to the next stage of development and to widen its reach to help regulators, particularly in low- to middle-income countries (LMICs), to keep pace with, and take advantage of, technological innovation.鈥

Since its launch in 2019, the CFTRI has since trained more than 1,200 financial regulators and central bankers from more than 300 regulatory authorities in over 140 jurisdictions.

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