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Open Finance

CGAP estimates that two billion low-income customers in low- and middle-income countries are digitally included, but a significant portion remain financially excluded or underserved. Open finance, with its potential to revolutionize the financial services sector, can be a substantial catalyst for financial inclusion. It is a financial innovation that facilitates permissioned access to, and use of, customer data held by financial institutions to provide new and enhanced services and develop innovative business models.  

Open finance promotes innovation by enabling new products, services, and business models. It can support competition, empower customers, and simplify financial services, benefiting customers and service providers. 

However, it's crucial to remember that these benefits can bring new and enhanced risks. With the increasing adoption of open finance in emerging markets and the increase of digital data trails, it is essential to understand how to maximize the potential benefits and assess the associated risks.  

CGAP is actively working to expand available research and resources on open finance. 

Featured Content

Additional Resources

Blog

India is pioneering open finance in developing economies, with 64 million accounts linked through its Account Aggregator ecosystem as of March 2024. As India continues to scale the ecosystem, early insights could help shape AA's future direction.
Events

This webinar features insights from CGAP research, as well as a panel discussion with experts from the Brazilian open finance ecosystem.
Blog

Brazil's rapid expansion of open finance shows its potential to transform financial services, and recent CGAP research offers valuable insights into Brazil, as well as other markets interested in implementing open finance.
Blog

Open finance gives consumers control over their personal financial data, leading to more suitable and better-targeted financial services. But this ability to move entire financial histories both empowers consumers and poses risks.
Events

In this webinar, the authors of a new CGAP Technical Note on open finance discussed how to address data protection concerns in an open finance world so that wary, low-income consumers in Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs) can take advantage of what open finance has to offer.
Blog

Open banking initiatives must be well designed to deliver the benefits they promise consumers and financial service providers - Nigeria’s framework offers a look at both the opportunities and potential pitfalls of implementing such a scheme. 
Events

Building on CGAP’s paper, Open Banking: How To Design for Financial Inclusion, this webinar featured regulators in Latin America and Africa who are implementing or planning to implement open banking regimes in emerging markets. A particular focus was on understanding how financial inclusion is affecting the regime choices they are making, as well as how challenges relating to governance and data protection are being dealt with.

Blog

When banks and other financial institutions responsibly exchange customer data with other providers, the result is better products for low-income customers.
Blog

Although growing numbers of low-income people are entering the formal financial system, many are not yet leveraging its full value. Emerging regimes for data sharing and payments flexibility have the potential to bypass traditional financial sector development and give poor customers better products and more choices.