The Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) is aware of the emergence of several initiatives which compete directly with traditional financial services.
These include but are not limited to: peer to peer lending, digital wallets, crowdfunding ventures, crypto-assets and initial coin offerings (ICOs) in the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU).
Consistent with its growth and development mandate, the ECCB supports and encourages innovation and verily believes that financial innovation is essential as our region forges a path to socio-economic transformation. Indeed, it is based on this conviction that the ECCB Strategic Plan 2017-2021 provides for a FinTech pilot, which includes a digital EC currency and the modernisation of our payment systems.
The ECCB is equally committed to its mandate of financial stability which aims to ensure the soundness and stability of the financial system. In this context, the ECCB is deeply concerned about the real possibility that ECCU citizens could suffer financial losses by getting involved in initiatives which they do not yet understand fully and, more importantly, are not regulated. Some of these offerings appear to be investment or securities business and ought to be regulated properly.
Before involvement with these initiatives, citizens are advised to consider the following questions:
-What do I know about this service provider and the services being offered?
-Do I understand both the opportunities and the risks?
-Is this service provider regulated and by whom?
-Does this service provider have appropriate anti-money laundering (AML) controls?
-What dispute resolution mechanisms exists if there is a dispute with this service provider?
The ECCB, in collaboration with domestic and other regional regulators, is reviewing existing laws to identify changes which may be required to ensure adequate regulatory cover for these initiatives thus supporting innovation, while ensuring consumer protection.
In this process of review, the ECCB is also engaging service providers in the FinTech industry on how best to support financial innovation.
You wrong,,,pm never did,,
I really do not understand! Why don’t someone break this down in layman’s terms.
Please and thanks!
In layman’s terms: the ECCB is trying to scare people into being afraid of new services that compete against its member banks.
In other words, too many loan sharks.. fast cash, big edge,
If my memory service me right was not the PM of Dominica making an attempt to introduce BITCION( Crypto -Currency )in Dominica?
ECCB…..We appreciate the intervention now but why did you not put those critical questions in the public domain then.
-What do I know about this service provider and the services being offered?
-Do I understand both the opportunities and the risks?
-Is this service provider regulated and by whom?
-Does this service provider have appropriate anti-money laundering (AML) controls?
-What dispute resolution mechanisms exists if there is a dispute with this service provider
Nope he never said anything about BITCION
Every resident was going to receive 10 US dollars worth of bitcoin. There was a public outcry with people shouting ‘scam’ and all other kinds of crap.
At the time (2015) 1 Bitcoin was worth about $250 US dollars
A few years later (2017) 1 Bitcoin was equal to over $15,000 US Dollars
Sometimes it pays to be first!
https://dominicanewsonline.com/news/homepage/news/business/main-organizer-digital-currency-project-speaks/
https://dominicanewsonline.com/news/homepage/news/business/bitcoin-event-in-dominica-cancelled/
But you are correct. The PM never said anything about it. Seemed very strange considering he was the minister of finance…