Regulating Financial Innovation: FinTech, Crypto-assets, DeFi, and Beyond.

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Bibliographic Details
Authors: Schwarcz, Steven L.
Source: Business Lawyer. Summer2024, Vol. 79 Issue 3, p615-664. 50p.
Subject Terms: *Financial inclusion, *Financial technology, *Online banking, *Financial services industry
Abstract: The term “FinTech” encompasses advances in technology that facilitate financial innovations, such as crypto-assets, algorithmic smart contracts, and decentralized financial platforms and services. Although FinTech promises greatly expanded financial inclusion and other valuable economic benefits, its radical transformational consequences are threatening to disrupt finance and even jeopardize the stability of the financial system. Scholars have been grappling with how the law can control these risks, but their contributions to date have been largely ad hoc. They also disagree whether FinTech-driven innovations are radically changing the financial system, necessitating completely new forms of regulation, or whether those innovations merely present the same types of risks already associated with electronic banking. This article attempts to build a systematic framework for regulating FinTech-driven innovations. In that process, it clarifies and simplifies the confusing terminology, which makes FinTech appear more complicated than it is. The article also shows how its framework should more generally inform the regulation of financial innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Database: Entrepreneurial Studies Source
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Abstract:The term “FinTech” encompasses advances in technology that facilitate financial innovations, such as crypto-assets, algorithmic smart contracts, and decentralized financial platforms and services. Although FinTech promises greatly expanded financial inclusion and other valuable economic benefits, its radical transformational consequences are threatening to disrupt finance and even jeopardize the stability of the financial system. Scholars have been grappling with how the law can control these risks, but their contributions to date have been largely ad hoc. They also disagree whether FinTech-driven innovations are radically changing the financial system, necessitating completely new forms of regulation, or whether those innovations merely present the same types of risks already associated with electronic banking. This article attempts to build a systematic framework for regulating FinTech-driven innovations. In that process, it clarifies and simplifies the confusing terminology, which makes FinTech appear more complicated than it is. The article also shows how its framework should more generally inform the regulation of financial innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ISSN:00076899