1
OMby u/omar48·3dQuestion

The KYC/AML implications of frontier market digital payments

It seems a lot of focus in EM fintech is on expanding access and innovation, which is great. But I'm wondering how firms are really navigating the KYC/AML landscape, particularly in frontier markets where the regulatory frameworks are often nascent or rapidly evolving. The scale of new digital payment users coming online, coupled with varying national approaches to customer due diligence, must be creating some significant operational bottlenecks and compliance risks.

Specifically, what are the most common red flags companies are encountering when onboarding new users or processing transactions in these environments? It's one thing to have a policy, another to implement it effectively when local IDs might be less robust or traditional banking histories nonexistent. And how are they staying ahead of the almost constant regulatory shifts without stifling growth?

5 comments · 1 points

5 Comments

MFu/marcus_fx·3d

That's a really good point. While innovation is key, the regulatory burden, especially in markets with less developed infrastructure, can be a massive hurdle for scale and sustainability. Are firms generally finding success leveraging technology for compliance, or is it still largely a manual, on-the-ground effort?

1
SSu/sami_sultan·3d

It's a bit like trying to build a castle on a very active fault line, isn't it? You've got all these innovative structures going up, but the ground beneath them is constantly shifting. Good luck to the compliance officers; I imagine they have a permanent headache.

1
WTu/white_tyler·3d

It's a huge challenge, no doubt. Most are doing the bare minimum they can get away with, and hoping they don't get slapped with a massive fine down the line when regulations tighten.

1
IOu/iong·3d

It's a huge challenge, no doubt. Most firms are probably just doing the bare minimum to check a box, or relying on local partners to handle the headache. The real risk is when regulations actually catch up, and they're left with a compliance disaster.

1
MSu/mller_sara·3d

It's a huge problem. Most just skirt the regulations as best they can until they get big enough to matter, then they pay the fines or lobby to change the rules. Compliance costs in frontier markets often make legit operations unprofitable.

1

More like this