Categories: Security

Bank Of England To Rewrite Core Payment Tech By 2020

The Bank of England is aiming to deliver a “comprehensive” rebuild of its core payment system by 2020, as it seeks to take into account rapid shifts in payment technologies, including distributed ledgers of the kind popularised by Bitcoin.

The bank said it would publish a timetable for the update to its 20-year-old Real-Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) service next year, with a provisional date for delivering the platform’s successor in four years’ time.


‘Now is the time’

The announcement follows the launch of a consultation in January, to which stakeholders responded that “now was the right time” for a next-generation RTGS, the bank said.

The platform is the Bank of England’s system for handling bank-to-bank payments, and on an average day it processes around £500bn, or nearly one-third of the UK’s annual gross domestic product.

The bank said ensuring stability remains its main objective, but it is also seeking to enable new technologies and competition where possible.

“Our proposals are intended to provide broader access, higher resilience, greater interoperability, and a wider range of user functionality compared to the RTGS of today,” the bank stated.

The key requirements for the new platform that emerged from the consultation included the ability to respond to the financial system’s changing structure, simpler and more resilient pathways for payments, support for interaction with new technologies including distributed ledgers, continued resilience and support for future regulatory and monetary policy tools, the bank said.

Financial innovations

The stakeholders consulted included current and potential future users, authorities, payment system operators, analysts and public interest groups.

The bank said it plans to consult with intelligence services on the new RTGS’ defences.

“Taken together with prospective reforms to retail payments underway in the industry, these changes are designed to keep the UK payments infrastructure at the leading edge globally whilst underscoring our commitment to maintaining stability and confidence,” stated Andrew Hauser, the bank’s executive director for banking, payments and financial resilience.

The full set of proposals is detailed in the consultation document, availalble on the bank’s website.

In June the bank announced a partnership with professional services giant PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PwC) to test a blockchain proof-of-concept.

Are you a security pro? Try our quiz!

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

Tesla Shares Surge On China Advanced Self-Driving Push

Tesla makes key advances toward advanced self-driving rollout in China as chief Elon Musk meets…

9 hours ago

UK Law Aims To Boost Security For ‘Smart’ Devices

New UK rules bring in basic security requirements for millions of internet-connected devices, aiming to…

10 hours ago

Alphabet Value Surges Over $2tn On Dividend Plan

Google parent Alphabet sees market capitalisation surge over $2tn on plan to over first-ever cash…

16 hours ago

Google Asks US Court To Dismiss Federal Adtech Case

Google asks Virginia federal court to dismiss case brought by US Justice Department and eight…

17 hours ago

Snap Sees Surge In Users, Ad Revenues

Snapchat parent Snap reports user growth, revenues in spite of tough competition, in what may…

17 hours ago

Shein Subject To Most Stringent EU Digital Rules

Quick-growing fast-fashion company Shein must comply with most stringent level of EU digital rules after…

18 hours ago