A UK minister has suggested that a state-backed timetable for the rollout of open banking has been finalised and will be published within one or two weeks.
Speaking at Pay360 in London on Wednesday (March 20), Conservative MP John Penrose said that his ministerial colleague had 鈥渃ommitted news鈥 last week when he unexpectedly revealed the plans.
鈥淚 asked him a question in parliament and he confessed, but I'm not sure he was supposed to,鈥 said Penrose.
鈥淗is officials had their heads in their hands after he said it, but he said: 鈥楲ook, I signed this off, and it left my desk yesterday鈥.鈥
The Cabinet colleague in question was Kevin Hollinrake, minister for enterprise, markets and small business, who was appointed to the position in October 2022.
Penrose said he has been pushing Hollinkrake and other Cabinet ministers to ensure the UK has a timetable for the rollout of open banking throughout the UK economy.
鈥淚t's all very well having something that covers the high-street banks, but what about other sectors of the economy?鈥 said Penrose.
鈥淲hat about energy? What about water? What about health? What about telecoms? What about online retailing?
鈥淎ll these other sectors are potentially ripe for disruption in the same way, but which sectors, and in what order?鈥
Penrose described his proposed timetable as an 鈥渋nvestable list鈥 of sectors that stand to benefit from open banking, and deadlines for industry and government to cooperate to invest in these sectors.
Penrose said he has been pushing for this 鈥渇or some while鈥, and his efforts now appear to have paid off.
A bill and timetable combination
But the timetable is not just a standalone project. Penrose said it will be twinned with the passage of the聽, which is likewise imminent.
The MP described the DPDI as 鈥渙ne bill to rule them all鈥 as far as privacy, automated decision-making and obligations for data processors and controllers is concerned.
However, throughout the evolution of the bill, Penrose has been of the view that it is still missing two or three important details, one of which is 鈥減ace鈥.
鈥淥pen banking is something that seems to be a British success story,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are in a wonderful position, and it's something we are leading the world in.
鈥淭he level of penetration and uptake of open banking in this country is much higher than the rest of the world.
鈥淲e have a commercial lead in this area but if we stand still, they will overtake us.鈥
One example that was often quoted at this year鈥檚 Pay360 was that of HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC), which in 2021 became the first government agency in the world to introduce open banking payments.
Since then, HMRC has received about 拢12bn in open banking payments,聽 拢3.3bn via its partner Ecospend in January 2024.
However, highlighting examples such as UPI in India and Pix in Brazil, Penrose said other countries are in some cases 鈥渢echnologically further ahead鈥 of the UK, and could quickly catch up in open banking.
He therefore sees the timetable as an important catalyst to ensure that open banking spreads across sectors, and is not confined to a handful of use cases.
Beyond a multi-sector rollout, Penrose said there is nothing stopping the UK from 鈥渟tretching鈥 its lead and exporting its open banking technologies and infrastructures to the rest of the world.
Standards setting: Penrose鈥檚 second ask
In addition to the timetable, Penrose has called on the government to agree on a plan for standards setting in UK open banking.
This idea has found strong support from the payments industry, including from Teresa Connors, chair of The Payments Association, who spoke highly of it at Pay360, but the government has not yet committed to it.
鈥淚t's all very well saying that we're going to take what's happening in open banking and apply it to energy, let鈥檚 say, but what happens if the data standards in energy don't talk to the data standards in open banking?鈥 said Penrose.
鈥淲e are missing an enormous opportunity if they aren't interoperable, because at that point, you basically have to reinvent the wheel every time you roll out open banking into a new sector.鈥
If the rollout of open banking in the UK proceeds in a stunted and fragmented way, the UK will lose speed and productivity will suffer, he said.
So the MP is 鈥渄evoutly鈥 hoping that, following the publication of the timetable, the government will commit to creating a standards setting body.
The body could be similar to the government鈥檚 existing聽, he suggested, but the form it takes is less important.
鈥淚 don't care who it is: they need to be competent, they need to be capable,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are a couple of organisations it could be, but we need to choose one and give them the mandate.鈥
Penrose then turned to the Pay360 audience and said: 鈥淚t could be you.鈥