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The Next Wave of Suptech Innovation : Suptech Solutions for Market Conduct Supervision.

World Bank Open Knowledge Repository (formerly "World Bank E-Library Publications") Available online

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Format:
Book
Government document
Author/Creator:
World Bank Group.
Series:
Other Financial Accountability Study.
World Bank e-Library.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Accountability.
Consumer Protection.
Corporate Data and Reporting.
E-Government.
Finance and Financial Sector Development.
Financial Regulation and Supervision.
Governance.
ICT Applications.
Information and Communication Technologies.
Information Technology.
Private Sector Development.
Local Subjects:
Accountability.
Consumer Protection.
Corporate Data and Reporting.
E-Government.
Finance and Financial Sector Development.
Financial Regulation and Supervision.
Governance.
ICT Applications.
Information and Communication Technologies.
Information Technology.
Private Sector Development.
Other Title:
Next Wave of Suptech Innovation
Place of Publication:
Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2021.
System Details:
data file
Summary:
Around the world, financial sector supervisors are experiencing a profound shift to data-driven supervision enabled by the next wave of technology and data solutions. While technology and data are not new to financial oversight, their specific application to financial consumer protection and market conduct supervision has become more widespread and sophisticated in recent years. Expanding on the World Bank's 2018 note on supervisory technology, or suptech, this technical note catalogues a range of specific solutions that financial authorities are deploying to help increase the efficiency and effectiveness of market conduct supervision. The note identifies four categories of suptech solutions (regulatory reporting, collection and processing of complaints data, non-traditional market monitoring, document and business analysis) and provides concrete examples of 18 different suptech solutions for market conduct supervision, drawing from the experiences of 14 financial sector authorities worldwide. The note also discusses implementation considerations and enablers of successful suptech adoption commonly experienced across countries.

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