Financial Innovation and Technology after COVID-19: a few Directions for Policy Makers and Regulators in the View of Old and New Disruptors
Articles
Maurizio Pompella
University of Siena, Italy
Lorenzo Costantino
IDP European Consultants, Bruxelles
Published 2021-10-08
https://doi.org/10.15388/Ekon.2021.100.2.2
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Keywords

Uberization
Disruption
Fintech
Blockchain
Tokenomics
Nothing-Baked-Securities
COVID-19

How to Cite

Pompella, M. and Costantino, L. (2021) “Financial Innovation and Technology after COVID-19: a few Directions for Policy Makers and Regulators in the View of Old and New Disruptors”, Ekonomika, 100(2), pp. 40–62. doi:10.15388/Ekon.2021.100.2.2.

Abstract

Innovation and technology have led to the redefinition of business models and development of new ones in many bricks and mortar sectors.  Similarly, blockchain and fintech have impacted the finance and banking industries and are expected to further affect them in the future, leading some media to coin the expression “Uberization of banking”.  The authors extrapolate from sharing economy models to conclude that while blockchain and fintech are poised to advance finance and banking, there are no disruptive features that corroborate the term.  By analogy and successive approximations, this article identifies the limitations of the arguments for disruption in finance and banking.  Besides, hinging upon stylized facts, the article establishes similarities with sharing economy models to identify potential threats stemming from financial innovations such as Tokenomics, tagged as “no-ABSs”.  Eventually, the authors identify entry points and ways forward arising from the COVID-19 pandemic for policy makers and regulators to regain their pivotal role in policing the market and ensuring transparency while driving innovation.

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