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Financial Services Review | Tuesday, June 17, 2025
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Fremont, CA: The G20 aims to improve cross-border payments by promoting faster, cheaper, transparent, and inclusive systems. This requires a unified effort involving the public and private sectors, addressing challenges like regulatory fragmentation, technological disparities, and financial inclusion gaps. Governments, central banks, and private entities can drive innovation, harmonize standards, and create a global ecosystem by fostering partnerships.
The primary challenge in cross-border payments is more standardization across jurisdictions. Diverse regulatory requirements, messaging standards, and compliance obligations create inefficiencies and increase costs for businesses and consumers. Public-private collaboration can bridge these gaps by fostering dialogue between policymakers and industry stakeholders. Governments and central banks can work with private payment providers and fintech companies to establish global standards for interoperability and compliance, ensuring seamless transactions across borders.
Innovation is another area where public-private collaboration is indispensable. The private sector's expertise in developing cutting-edge technologies, such as blockchain, digital currencies, and artificial intelligence, can complement the public sector's regulatory oversight and infrastructure. For instance, central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) hold significant promise for improving cross-border payments. Still, their development and deployment require close coordination with private entities to ensure scalability and usability. Collaborations explore using multi-CBDC platforms for international settlements and demonstrate how joint initiatives can unlock transformative solutions for global payments.
Financial inclusion is a central focus of the G20's cross-border payment agenda. Millions of individuals and small businesses face barriers to affordable and efficient payment systems, particularly in developing countries. Public-private partnerships are essential to designing inclusive solutions that address these disparities. Private companies can deploy innovative services like mobile wallets and low-cost remittance platforms. The collaborations can extend the benefits of cross-border payments to marginalized communities. The public sector can establish clear regulations and oversight mechanisms to ensure security and consumer protection.
Reducing costs is another crucial goal of the G20 cross-border payment framework—high fees for international transactions, particularly remittances, burden individuals and businesses. Collaboration between public and private sectors can identify and eliminate inefficiencies in the payment chain. For example, central banks can modernize legacy systems, while private firms introduce cost-effective technologies like distributed ledger systems. Fostering public-private collaboration is essential for navigating geopolitical and economic complexities.