Contribution ID: f693edc8-c49b-4d4b-a161-696be6c5d1fd
Date: 30/06/2020 11:33:04
Consultation on a new digital finance strategy
for Europe / FinTech action plan
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Introduction
This consultation is now available in 23 European Union official languages.
Please use the language selector at the top of this page to choose your language for this consultation.
1. Background for this consultation
Digitalisation is transforming the European financial system and the provision of financial services to Europe’s
businesses and citizens. In the past years, the EU and the Commission embraced digitalisation and innovation in the
financial sector through a combination of horizontal policies mainly implemented under the umbrella of the Digital Single
Market Strategy, the Cyber Strategy and the Data economy and sectoral initiatives such as the revised Payment
Services Directive, the recent political agreement on the crowdfunding regulation and the
FinTech Action Plan
. The
initiatives set out in the FinTech Action Plan aimed in particular at supporting the scaling up of innovative services and
businesses across the EU, for example through enhanced supervisory convergence to promote the uptake of new
technologies by the financial industry (e.g. cloud computing) but also to enhance the security and resilience of the
financial sector. All actions in the Plan have been completed.
The financial ecosystem is continuously evolving, with technologies moving from experimentation to pilot testing and
deployment stage (e.g. blockchain; artificial intelligence; Internet of Things) and new market players entering the
financial sector either directly or through partnering with the incumbent financial institutions. In this fast-moving
environment, the Commission should ensure that European consumers and the financial industry can reap the potential
of the digital transformation while mitigating the new risks digital finance may bring. The expert group on Regulatory
Obstacles to Financial Innovation, established under the 2018 FinTech Action Plan, highlight these challenges in its
report published in December 2019.
The Commission’s immediate political focus is on the task of fighting the coronavirus health emergency, including its
economic and social consequences. On the economic side, the European financial sector has to cope with this
unprecedented crisis, providing liquidity to businesses, workers and consumers impacted by a sudden drop of activity
and revenues. Banks must be able to reschedule credits rapidly, through rapid and effective processes carried out fully
remotely. Other financial services providers will have to play their role in the same way in the coming weeks.
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