1st Edition

Regulating Open Banking Comparative Analysis of the EU, the UK and Taiwan

By Chang-Hsien Tsai, Kuan-Jung Peng Copyright 2023
    110 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    FinTech transformations have brought changes to the global financial markets and merit the attention of financial regulators across jurisdictions.

    This book is one of the first ones of its kind to look at open banking (OB). It examines regulatory approaches to OB by taking a broad view of comparative legal systems and through perspectives of transaction costs, public choice, and institutional design.

    The book looks at the legal implications by engaging in a two-tiered comparative analysis: comparing between compulsory and voluntary approaches to OB policies and comparing the legal systems between the West (i.e., the EU and the UK) and an Asian economy (i.e., Taiwan).

    1.Introduction: Compulsory Versus Voluntary Approaches to Open Banking 2. A New Era of Financial Innovation:  Information as an Important Factor in Shaping the Digital Finance 3. Experiences of the EU and the UK in Advocating Open Banking 4. Open Banking or Open Only to Banks? A Comparative Perspective in Regulatory Policies from the EU and the UK to Taiwan 5. An Approach that Truly Promotes Financial Innovation, Competition, and Inclusion in the Era of FinTech

    Biography

    Chang-Hsien Tsai is Professor of Law and Business, Director of Institute of Law for Science and Technology, and Director of Master Program of Health Policy and Business Administration (HBA), College of Technology Management, National Tsing Hua University, Taiwan.

    Kuan-Jung Peng is currently a PhD candidate at the European Doctorate in Law & Economics (Erasmus University Rotterdam, the Netherlands; University of Hamburg, Germany; University of Bologna, Italy).