Open banking is a silent revolution transforming the banking industry. It is the manifestation of the revolution of consumer technology in banking and will dramatically change not only how we bank, but also the world of finance and how we interact with it. Since the United Kingdom along with the rest of the European Union adopted rules requiring banks to share customer data to improve competition in the banking sector, a wave of countries from Asia to Africa to the Americas have adopted various forms of their own open banking regimes. Among Basel Committee jurisdictions, at least fifteen jurisdictions have some form of open banking, and this number does not even include the many jurisdictions outside the Basel Committee membership with open banking activities. Although U.S. banks and market participants have been sharing customer-permissioned data for the past twenty years and there have been recent policy discussions, such as the Obama administration's failed Consumer Data Privacy Bill and the Data Aggregation Principles of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, open banking is still a little-known concept among consumers and policymakers in the States. This book defines the concept of 'open banking' and explores key legal, policy, and economic questions raised by open banking.
Auteur
Linda Jeng is a Visiting Scholar on Financial Technology and Adjunct Professor of Law at Georgetown University Law Center's Institute of International Economic Law. Her research interests include open banking, data rights, digital currencies and blockchain. She is also leading policy, regulatory and product strategy at the fintech startup Transparent Systems. Previously, she was with the Fed and had chaired the Basel Committee's working group on open banking and APIs. She has spent most of her career working on financial stability and Too-Big-To-Fail regulatory reform, including at the Financial Stability Board in Basel, Switzerland, the U.S. Senate during the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, and the U.S. Treasury Department during the international implementation of G20-led reforms. Prof. Jeng has worked at the Securities & Exchange Commission, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and a global bank in Paris. She has a J.D. from Columbia Law School, a Master of Advanced Studies from Université de Toulouse, France, and a B.A. from Duke University.
Contenu
Foreword by Chris Brummer Introduction by Linda Jeng Chapter 1: Open Banking Ecosystem and Infrastructure: Banking on Openness by Andres Wolberg-Stok Chapter 2: Defining Data Rights and the Role of the Individual by Kaitlin Asrow Chapter 3: Customer Protection and the Liability Conundrum in an Open Finance Ecosystem by Steven Boms and Sam Taussig Chapter 4: Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning: The Opportunities and Challenges of Using Big Data by Matthew Adam Bruckner Chapter 5: Data Access Technology Standards: A History of Open Banking Data Access by Don Cardinal and Nick Thomas Chapter 6: Taking Your Data with You: Singapore's Approach to Data Portability by Zee Kin Yeong and David Roi Hardoon Chapter 7: Open Banking and the Economics of Data by Yan Carrière-Swallow and Vikram Haksar Chapter 8: Open Banking, Open Data, and Open Finance: Lessons from the European Union by Douglas W. Arner, Ross P. Buckley and Dirk A. Zetzsche Chapter 9: United Kingdom: The Butterfly Effect by Gavin Littlejohn, Ghela Boskovich and Richard Prior Chapter 10: The Australian Consumer Data Right: The Promise of Open Data by Julie McKay and Jamie Leach Chapter 11: India's Approach to Open Banking: Some Implications for Financial Inclusion by Yan Carrière-Swallow, Vikram Haksar and Manasa Patnam Chapter 12: Digital Identity: Exploring a Consumer-centric Identity for Open Banking by Greg Kidd Chapter 13: Decentralized Finance: The Future of Crypto and Open Finance? By Nic Carter Chapter 14: From Open Banking to Open Data and Beyond: Competition and the Future of Banking by Brad Carr