FinTech and the Law and Economics of Disintermediation

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2021
Host editors
  • I.H.-Y. Chiu
  • G. Deipenbrock
Book title Routledge Handbook of Financial Technology and Law
ISBN
  • 9780367344146
  • 9780367726553
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9780429325670
Series Routledge handbooks
Pages (from-to) 78-95
Publisher London: Routledge
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Amsterdam Center for Law & Economics (ACLE)
Abstract
As FinTech promises to increase competition for both banks and investment firms, we consider the market failures that emerge from its existence, particularly as they relate to issues of financial stability and investor protection. This chapter discusses the wave of technology-enabled disintermediation of financial services, asking how regulation should cope with the risks associated with disintermediating finance. While regulation of financial intermediaries has been embraced because the industry is particularly prone to market failures, disintermediation has the potential to make current frameworks obsolete. The law & economics problem is twofold: 1) potential market failures, and 2) the issue of enforcement. This chapter discusses the foundations of financial intermediation and the traditional regulatory approaches to both banks and other providers of financial services. Our analysis establishes a distinction between FinTechs working outside and inside the blockchain. For the former, the crucial regulatory trade-off is between efficiency gains from innovation and regulatory arbitrage. For the latter, our analysis suggests that regulating the convertibility of cryptocurrencies into fiat money is a promising strategy not only to safeguard financial stability, but also to attract financial services to the regulatory perimeter, whenever it is efficient to do so.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Related publication Debunking Fintech Inside and Outside the Blockchain
Published at https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429325670-5
Published at https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3683427
Downloads
SSRN-id3683427 (Submitted manuscript)
10.4324_9780429325670-5_chapterpdf (Final published version)
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