The correlation of Financial Action Task Force recommendations: the perception of compliance officers concerning the deployment of third parties and Fintech for customer due diligence
The correlation of Financial Action Task Force recommendations: the perception of compliance officers concerning the deployment of third parties and Fintech for customer due diligence
Nasir Sultan,Norazida Mohamed,David Chisunga,Akhbar Satar
2025 · DOI: 10.1108/jmlc-08-2024-0135
Journal of Money Laundering Control · 0 Citations
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to explore the challenges financial institutions face in deploying third parties and financial technologies to perform customer due diligence.Design/methodology/approach
This study applied a qualitative technique and interviewed 25 compliance officers from different financial institutes and their regulators.Findings
This study found that the third-party recommendation of the Financial Action Task Force is restrictive, contradictory, time-consuming and seriously lacks standardisation. Furthermore, this recommendation restricts the use of modern Fintechs. This recommendation has posed significant challenges for the adoption of Fintechs, international banking/onboarding, digital onboarding and financial inclusion.Practical implications
Thus, revisiting the Financial Action Task Force Recommendations 17 and 15 in correlation with Recommendation 10 is suggested.Originality/value
The Recommendation 17 is rarely discussed in details, especially in developing courtiers’ context.