UK Economic Secretary, Ed Balls, on Monday launched a consultation on the Payment Services Directive.
The Directive aims to deliver an EU internal market in payment services. It will harmonise the legal and technical requirements for the provision of payments services and introduces a new EU-wide licensing regime for businesses which offer payment services but which are not licensed as banks or e-money issuers.
It will also support the delivery of the industry-led Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) initiative, which is intended to enable cross-border payments in Euros to be made as cheaply, easily and efficiently as payments within individual Member States.
Once agreed, the directive will allow UK payment providers, such as credit card issuers, to significantly expand their markets by offering their services across the EU. The change will also offer benefits to consumers by increasing competition in the market leading to lower prices and a wider choice of services.
Mr Balls explained that:
"Our goal is a Payment Services Directive which further deepens the European Single Market in financial services and opens up markets for UK firms while increasing choice for UK consumers. I am determined that we work closely with the City and consumer groups to ensure that the Directive properly achieves its aims whilst maintaining a proportionate and light touch regulatory environment."
The launch took place at a speech to business leaders on financial services, given at the Industry Forum, a non-profit making organization that promotes dialogue between business and Government. The public consultation will run for 12 weeks from the 3 of July, closing on the 25 September.
.
|
Archive | Resources | Partners | Site Map | Links | Newsletter Archive | Contact | RSS Feeds | About | Syndication | Advertising & Marketing | Recruitment | Terms & Conditions | Privacy & Cookies
Copyright © 2012 - All Rights Reserved - Tax-News.com
IMPORTANT NOTICE: Tax-News.com has taken reasonable care in sourcing and presenting the information contained on this site, but accepts no responsibility for any financial or other loss or damage that may result from its use. In particular, users of the site are advised to take appropriate professional advice before committing themselves to involvement in offshore jurisdictions, offshore trusts or offshore investments.
Write a comment