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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

FSB requests feedback on data frameworks affecting cross-border payments

Privacy/Cyber Risk & Data Security Financial Stability Board Of Interest to Non-US Persons Payments

Privacy, Cyber Risk & Data Security

Recently, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) issued a survey requesting stakeholder feedback on “how existing national and regional data frameworks interact with and affect the functioning, regulation and supervision of cross-border payment arrangements,” in addition to feedback on issues concerning the cross-border use of these data frameworks by national authorities and the private sector. Data frameworks within the survey’s scope include those concerning data access; data privacy, security, or storage; requirements for data retention; and multilateral or bilateral trade agreements covering the use and sharing of data across borders. Among other things, the survey seeks information on (i) ways data-specific national and regional data frameworks affect the costs and speed of delivering payments, as well as access and transparency; (ii) potential barriers to cross-border data use; (iii) areas of improvement for overcoming barriers in data frameworks; (iv) whether one jurisdiction’s data framework can impact the provision or supervision of cross-border payments services offered in other jurisdictions; and (v) whether there are particular payment corridors (especially related to emerging markets) that face specific challenges related to data frameworks. The survey also requests information on the implementation of international standards from the FSB and other standard-setting bodies, “if not included as part of formal, domestic data frameworks,” and “[o]ther international efforts, arrangements, or agreements that jurisdictions may implement in their domestic data frameworks or that may affect cross-border data flows.” The survey will close on January 14, 2022.