Cross-border payments are essential for global trade, remittances, and financial transactions, but remain inefficient compared to domestic payments. This column reviews developments in the wholesale, retail, and remittances segments and outlines the challenges and opportunities for cross-border payments. Emerging technologies such as distributed ledger technology and decentralised finance offer potential solutions, but also raise regulatory, governance, and supervisory concerns. Granular and higher-quality data are required to better assess the costs, speed, access, and efficiency of cross-border payments. Furthermore, public-private partnerships are crucial for fostering innovation, efficiency, and competitive payment systems.
Cross-border payments are essential for global trade, remittances, and financial transactions. For centuries, cross-border payments have been an important part of the development of financial systems and countries (e.g. Bindseil and Pantelopoulos 2022, Bruno et al. 2025, Schenk 2024). Yet, they remain inefficient compared to domestic payments, as documented recently in Lammer et al. (2025). Wholesale cross-border payments are relatively low-cost and fast, but retail cross-border payments and remittances have not seen similar progress as with domestic payments and are still very costly, slow, and less accessible.
These deficiencies have been long recognised (e.g. CPMI 2018), but efforts were boosted in 2020 after the G20 established a programme to enhance the efficiency of cross-border payment arrangements (FSB 2020, CPMI 2020). Considerable progress has been made since, but more needs to be done, as also noted recently by Governors Andrew Bailey of the Bank of England (Bailey 2026) and Fabio Panetta of the Bank of Italy (Panetta 2026).
Research on cross-border payments also remains behind that on domestic payments, particularly on new and possible innovative models. Lessons and recommendations are sorely needed on how national and international efforts can best address barriers and what solutions work for improving cross-border payments. In a recent paper (Claessens and Rice 2026), we explore the evolution of cross-border payments, identify the challenges for the three key segments (retail, remittances, and wholesale payments), review related research and policy work, and draw lessons on how best to enhance cross-border payments and improve their efficiency, including on the balance between public and private sector initiatives.
Like domestic payments, cross-border payments involve front-end (user interfaces) and back-end (infrastructure and processes) systems (Figure 1). While over the past decades, technological innovation has drastically changed the front end of domestic payments, it is making much more measured inroads into the cross-border payments ecosystem. Still, there are some new alternative and innovative arrangements. Recent developments on the front-end like Wise, Revolut, and M-Pesa Global have introduced lower cost and more user-friendly solutions for retail cross-border payments. However, they often still depend on existing infrastructure and remain limited in scale. On the back end, the traditional correspondent banking model, which relies on bilateral relationships between banks, still dominates cross-border payments. Although resilient and integral to wholesale payments, this model is poorly suited for retail payments and remittances due to its high costs, slow processing, and limited transparency. Developments to enhance the back-end infrastructure for cross-border payments efficiency include interlinking fast payment systems (FPS) and centralised hubs like TIPS (EU) and PAPSS (Africa). These rely less on intermediaries and improve interoperability but tend to evolve more slowly and to date have complemented the traditional correspondent banking model, rather than replaced it.
Figure 1 The current state of cross-border payments
Emerging technologies include distributed ledger technology (DLT), decentralised finance (DeFi), stablecoins, and tokenised assets (e.g. Adrian et al. 2025, BIS 2020, 2025). These could enable real-time settlement, automate processes, enhance transparency, and reduce reconciliation efforts. While they offer potential solutions, their effectiveness in improving cross-border payments depends on specific use cases, jurisdictional contexts, and objectives. And unless some key issues are addressed, the potential roles of DeFi and stablecoins in safe and legitimate cross-border payments will be doubtful.
Research and policy lessons to date confirm that technology alone cannot overcome the significant regulatory, governance, and supervisory complexities across borders. Rather, challenges such as regulatory gaps, financial risks, and scalability issues remain, which necessitate public efforts.
We emphasise the need for better data and lessons on the roles of private and public sectors. Granular and higher quality data are required to better assess the costs, speed, access, and efficiency of cross-border payments. Analytical efforts should focus on identifying barriers to effective cross-border payments arrangements and methods to best align systems. Going forward, the private sector will continue to drive innovation, but it must align its systems more with international standards and policies across payment arrangements. Complementarily, the public sector — central banks, other public authorities, international agencies — needs, as a priority, to coordinate standards, technologies, and legal frameworks. Public-private partnerships are crucial for fostering innovation, efficiency, and competitive payment systems. Globally consistent legal frameworks, anti-money laundering (AML)/combating the financing of terrorism (CFT) compliance, and interoperability with traditional systems are critical for effective cross-border payments and preventing regulatory arbitrage. International efforts and recommendations are key, and the G20 cross-border payments programme addresses barriers and proposes solutions for improving cross-border payments. Its frameworks, guidelines, and standards should be implemented in a timely and consistent way reflecting country-specific needs and using public-private actions to scale efficient systems.
Source : VOXeu
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