000 01791nam a22002177a 4500
999 _c5180
_d5180
005 20230323144052.0
008 230315b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780367647957
082 _a332.10289
_bTSA
100 _aTsai, Chang-Hsien
_911978
245 _aRegulating open banking:
_bcomparative analysis of the EU, the UK and Taiwan
260 _bRoutledge
_aNew York
_c2023
300 _axi, 94 p.
365 _aGBP
_b44.99
504 _aTable of Contents 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
520 _aFinTech 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
650 _aBanks and banking--Security measures
_912276
650 _aConfidential communications--Banking
_912277
700 _aPeng, Kuan-Jung
_912278
942 _2ddc
_cBK