Government announces inevitable end to Payments Services Regulator
The government has abolished the Payments Services Regulator and will move responsibilities to Financial Conduct Authority
The government has canned the Payments Services Regulator (PSR) to reduce red tape as part of its Plan for Change. PSR activities will be transitioned to the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), which will provide “one port of call” to payments system providers rather having to deal with multiple regulators.
In November 2024, a speech given by chancellor of the exchequer Rachel Reeves at Mansion House, London, made the move inevitable, according to fintech industry expert and CEO at The Finanser, Chris Skinner.
He said the decision was announced “tacitly” in November, adding: “The issue was that the PSR was often on a collision course with the FCA, so it got confusing. Therefore, the National Payments Vision determined that the FCA would take precedent on any regulatory matters, which begged the question, ‘Why would you need another regulator with no power?’”
In November, following the Mansion House meeting, Skinner wrote about the UK’s National Payments Vision: “… There are two regulators involved in payments: the FCA and the PSR. The consultation discovered that the two authorities often work separately and are uncoordinated. Decision: the FCA will lead anything that requires payments regulation under their remit, where it collides with the PSR. Basically, all new regulatory changes required in the payments space will be lead by the FCA.”
The government said the announcement “does not result in any immediate changes to the PSRs remit or ongoing programme of work. The regulator will continue to have access to its statutory powers until legislation is passed by Parliament to enact these changes.”
Prime minister Keir Starmer said: “For too long, the previous government hid behind regulators – deferring decisions and allowing regulations to bloat and block meaningful growth.”
The government said the decision “follows complaints from businesses that the regulatory environment was too complex, with payment system firms having to engage with three different regulators, costing them time, money and resource. “
FCA CEO Nikhil Rathi said that the changed payments landscape means “now is the right time to put in place a more streamlined regulatory framework. Doing so is a natural next step, following recent work to improve co-ordination and clarity on regulatory responsibilities”, adding that he welcomes “the deep expertise of PSR colleagues within the FCA”.
The government said: “The entire regulatory landscape will continue to be reviewed and finessed as part of a wider government effort to kickstart economic growth and make regulators work for the country, rather than block progress.”
Skinner added that the PSR’s role was created due to the large and diverse payments sector as a result of fintech. “Regulations were moving to more granularity and, with so many fintech payment services rising in the past decade, it demanded a specific body to oversee the industry.”
He outlined some of the market diversity: “Bear in mind we were talking prepaid cards, contactless payment services and electronic money institutions. Now that market has matured, a dedicated regulator is no longer needed.”
Chancellor Reeves said that “the regulatory system has become burdensome to the point of choking off innovation, investment and growth”, adding that the government would “free businesses from that stranglehold”.
Read more about payments regulation
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- UK payments regulator confirms changes to rules around repaying customers who lose money to authorised push payment fraudsters.
- Banking code of practice organisation wants banks to monitor where authorised push payment scammers are sending stolen money.
Originally published at ECT News