International coalition pursues cross-border payments improvements


In a new report, a group of international organizations give a broad overview of routes for improving international payments systems

The report lands at a time when payments are evolving at a rapid pace, with financial technology innovations, new market entrants and government initiatives are transforming legacy systems. For instance, real-time payments are accelerating payments worldwide. 

At the same time, cultural changes worldwide are driving payment systems toward more inclusivity for all people. The G20 international forum has been seeking for years to lower the cost of cross-border payments in the interest of reducing the cost burden of such remittances on migrants worldwide.

While there are regional cross-border systems today, the report noted the limitations of existing systems and the challenges they face for extending their reach.

The international organizations behind the report offered their analysis in the context of the trends and treated it as only their latest step in a long-term endeavor. They pointed to the need for government support of such a cross-border payment system expansion, especially with respect to initial seed funding and regulatory standards.

“It would be critical for the public sector to closely monitor its establishment and evolution, to ensure that participation requirements and pricing policies support fair and open access, and governance arrangements uphold policy objectives of fair competition and interoperability,” the report said of any new system. 

The report also made clear the private sector should be involved as well. Payments startups in the U.S. and elsewhere have focused on developing products and services that allow for more efficient cross-border payments. New York-based Sable and Seattle-based Remitly are two companies pursing new products and services in that realm.

Authors of the report also noted another route to improving cross-border payments might be the creation of central bank digital currencies. Some countries have already developed CBDCs and others, including the U.S., are exploring the possibility.


By Lynne Marek on Jan 23, 2023
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