Thank you, Mr. Chair. I will.
I certainly appreciate the enthusiasm and interest in terms of the retail payment activities act. I'm Erin O'Brien, director general of financial services at the Department of Finance. I'm joined by my colleagues, Richard Bilodeau, director general of the financial institutions division; Julie Trepanier, senior director of payments policy; and Manuel Dussault, senior director of framework policy, all within the financial sector policy branch at the department.
As has been noted, clause 178 would enact the retail payment activities act. The proposed act implements a new retail payments oversight framework that would promote growth, innovation and competition in digital payment services while ensuring that these services are provided on a safer and more secure basis for consumers and businesses.
As was noted, the retail payment sector enables millions of Canadians to send and receive money on a daily basis and plays a fundamental role in terms of supporting economic activity.
The proposed act would apply to payment service providers such as card networks, payments processors, money remitters and, as was mentioned, digital wallets. The act would require that these payment service providers safeguard end-user funds against losses and mitigate risks associated with operational failure that could disrupt their service.
The Bank of Canada would regulate payment service providers' compliance with the framework and maintain a registry of regulated payment service providers. The proposed legislation also includes national security safeguards that are modelled on the framework that applies to federally regulated financial institutions. These would enable the government to identify and respond to national security-related risks.
The proposed framework also recognizes that the federal, and provincial and territorial governments have complementary objectives and powers in this area. In particular, I would highlight two key elements.
One, the act and the framework do not apply to either federally or provincially regulated financial institutions, as these institutions are already supervised under a prudential framework. As well, the act includes a recognition mechanism whereby if a province or territory decides to develop comparable measures, the Bank of Canada could exempt a payment service provider from elements of this framework.
In conclusion, while the proposed legislation sets out the main elements of the framework, regulations and guidance will be required before it can be brought into force.
That provides a high-level summary of the key elements of the framework described in clause 178.