Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

Número de respuestas: 31

Digital Financial Services (DFS) include additional risks over and above traditional financial risks. These additional risks emerge from:

  • the dependence on technology
  • use of digital devices
  • interconnectivity of devices
  • extensive agent networks
  • new business models
  • diverse customer bases.

Supervisors must understand how all these aspects modify existing risks in delivering financial services, as well as how they create new risks.

Understanding and working with the risks involved with supervision in DFS requires an approach referred to as risk-based supervision.

Risk-based supervision helps supervisors allocate limited resources effectively by systematically assessing and prioritising risks across DFS providers and DFS-related areas. It helps supervisors achieve statutory policy goals despite limited resources and skills. Through structured assessment and prioritisation, supervisors can adjust the intensity of their activities to achieve greater effectiveness and efficiency. This approach helps balance policy objectives related to inclusion, stability, integrity, competition, and consumer protection.

How risk-based supervision works in practice, and what criteria supervisors should use to prioritise risks and DFS providers, depends on certain key factors.

These include, among others:

  • Country
  • Sector
  • Market size
  • Number of customers
  • Effects on vulnerable or excluded groups, such as low-income women

There is no single recipe for risk-based supervision or for the risk evaluation criteria supporting it. Supervisors must tailor both to their strategic objectives with those of the DFS providers they supervise.

Risk-based supervision requires supervisors to identify and measure the risks created by each provider’s DFS activities. Then, they need to estimate the potential impact and the likelihood that these identified risks will materialise. Supervisors need to understand the relative importance of various providers by conducting risk assessment at the market level, and the different risks within each provider, by conducting risk assessment at the provider level. Using this information, supervisors can tailor the type, scope, and depth of their activities.

A risk-based approach is especially critical amid fast-changing digital financial inclusion, where supervisors face challenges, including limited staffing and resources to oversee a rapidly expanding number of providers and customers, new business models and technologies, limited legal powers to obtain data, and inadequate analytical tools.

In this video, we discuss the five steps to follow to implement risk-based supervision that will foster inclusive DFS.

 

 

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Reflection Questions for Discussion

Remember that one of the aims of this course is for you to apply what you learn to your own context. As in Module 1, we will continue to provide you with questions for reflection. These questions are specifically designed to get you to reflect on your country and context.

We encourage you to respond to these questions using the forum functionality, sharing your reflections and insights with your fellow students. In this way, we hope to encourage collaboration and the building of a community of practitioners.

Here are the first reflection questions:

  1. How does adopting a risk-based approach to supervision help supervisors manage the growing complexity of DFS?
  2. What challenges might supervisors face when developing and implementing a risk assessment methodology for DFS providers?
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Erah, Dominic Ose Erah - Group 1
1. A risk-based approach helps supervisors manage the complexity of Digital Financial Services (DFS) by focusing resources and oversight on the highest risk activities and providers, allowing them to address emerging risks effectively without applying a one size fits all method.
2. Supervisors may face challenges such as limited data, rapidly evolving technologies and business models, skill gaps in understanding digital risks and difficulty coordinating oversight across multiple regulators involved in the DFS ecosystem
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de LEILAH ABDALAH MUBEYA - Group 6
1. A risk-based approach helps supervisors efficiently focus on high-risk DFS providers, enabling proactive oversight while supporting innovation and financial inclusion.
2. The key challenge in implementing a risk-based supervisory approach for DFS is the limited availability of accurate, timely, and comprehensive data, combined with the need for effective coordination with other authorities to monitor risks across multiple regulatory areas.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Sarah Davinah Namata - Group 4
1. Supervisors are able to focus resources on the high risk providers and tailor mitigants to risks appropriately.
2. Supervisors are faced with inadequate accurate and timely data and limited resources (mainly time).
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Khawaja Khair ud Din Khawaja - Group 5
1. A risk based approach helps supervisor to identify and prioritize risks to digital financial service providers, mitigate them through proportional supervision and effective and efficient use of supervisory resources.
2. Challenges usually include change of mind set especially for those who had been prone to compliance based supervision, technical complex products and services which may be new to a supervisor to assess, limited cybersecuity and technical human resource, complex business models with various players, which may or may no be under direct supervision.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Jemimah Precious Kuteesa - Group 4
1. A risk-based approach helps supervisors translate regulations or mandates to DFS providers into actions that are measurable risk markings like market share, asset size, client base among others. This way, supervisors can rank providers based on their systemic importance; whether high risk or low risk and consequently apply available resources respectively.

2. Supervisors may struggle with limited technical skills in areas of cybersecurity and data analytics, yet most DFS providers are widely technology reliant.
Designing risk matrices and distinguishing between high and low impact (residual) risks. These challenges altogether may limit positive impact of supervisory tools.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de EDGAR MWAKASITU - Group 6
1. The risk based approach is real helpful for instance in Tanzania there are almost 70+ licensed payment service providers. Despite the growing number of these providers we have managed to develop frameworks for identifying systemic payment systems (for banks and non banks DFS), so that it helps when preparing onsite inspections. With the help of these tools we have been able to focus to few DFS providers identified to be more systemic in the payment systrems thereby, we are having a better supervisory plan.

2. The main challenges we have accountered when developing these tools include collecting data from each provider (70+ DFS providers), analyzing so that to generate reflection of the market, generating results, grading service providers. All these need time and energy but the most important is cooperation from both internal and external stakeholders during development of the frameworks to the implementation.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Elsabet Assefa - Group 2
1. A risk-based approach helps supervisors manage this by focusing limited resources on the most material risks and highest-impact providers rather than applying uniform, resource-intensive supervision to all. Through steps like mapping goals to risks, assessing impact indicators, prioritizing salient risks via tools such as risk matrices, and developing targeted supervisory plans, supervisors can efficiently allocate staff time and expertise to priority areas. This dynamic, adaptable cycle supported by high-quality data and ongoing refinement allows supervisors to respond to changes, address emerging risks, and balance objectives like efficiency, interoperability, consumer protection, and inclusion without being overwhelmed by the sector's complexity.
2. Supervisors may encounter several challenges, including: Identifying and measuring appropriate impact indicators
Determining reliable, measurable factors to assess the potential impact of risks materializing, especially across diverse DFS provider types.
Designing a robust methodology, creating a consistent approach to evaluate how inherent risks translate into net risks, while assigning appropriate weights in risk matrices. Risk matrices are not an exact science and can vary, requiring careful calibration to avoid misalignment.
Conducting initial comprehensive assessments, when new to the approach, performing thorough baseline risk assessments for all providers to enable future prioritized reviews is resource intensive.
Prioritizing effectively as the sector scales: With a growing number of providers, shifting from individual risk focus to weighted matrices and cross-departmental alignment becomes complex; annual brainstorming sessions are recommended but require coordination to stay ahead of emerging risks.
Maintaining dynamism and data quality, the fast-evolving DFS landscape demands continuous updates to goals, indicators, methodologies, and plans, while relying on high-quality, up-to-date data and analytics capabilities, which may be limited in some contexts.
Resource constraints and adaptability, Supervisors have limited time and expertise, so balancing comprehensive initial work with ongoing targeted supervision, while reserving capacity for emergencies or unforeseen events, is difficult.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Beyene Getenet Getu - Group 2
1. A risk-based approach allows DFS supervisors to be strategic, efficient, proactive, and innovation friendly while maintaining a safe and inclusive financial sector.
2. Supervisors often face significant challenges when developing and implementing a risk assessment methodology for Digital Financial Services (DFS) providers. DFS markets evolve rapidly, involve diverse actors, and rely heavily on technology making traditional supervisory methods insufficient. The key challenges of implementing a risk assessment methodology for Digital Financial Service providers are limited capacity and technical expertise, poor or inconsistent data, new business models that don’t fit old frameworks, rapid innovation and evolving risks, coordination gaps among regulators and resource constraints.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Usman Bayero - Group 1
1. In Nigeria's rapidly expanding payment ecosystem, and RBS approach helps supervisors helps supervisors in so many different ways e.g Strategic resource allocation, Addressing Aodularization. As new products like the open banking or the Central Bank of Nigeria's CBDC (Enaira) evolve, RBS allows supervisors to pivot thier focus to emerging threats mid-cycle, rather than sticking to rigid oudated inspection schedule.
2.Supervisors often encounter several hurdles like data gaps, technical skill gaps, rapid innovation cycles and oversight of unregulated entities when developing and implementing a risk assesment methodlogy for DFS providers.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Mariam Nansubuga - Group 4
1. A risk-based approach helps supervisors manage DFS complexity by focusing limited resources on the highest-risk providers and activities, ensuring oversight is proportionate, targeted, and adaptive rather than uniformly applied across an increasingly diverse and fast-evolving market.

2. Supervisors face challenges including rapidly evolving business models that quickly outdate assessment frameworks, data gaps arising from providers operating across multiple regulatory domains, internal capacity constraints in technical and digital expertise, and the difficulty of designing a standardized methodology that is meaningful and consistently applied across a diverse range of DFS provider types and sizes.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de AISHA UMARU HADEJIA - Group 1
1) A risk-based approach to supervision helps supervisors manage the complexity of Digital Financial Services by directing attention and resources to the areas of greatest risk. Instead of applying the same level of oversight everywhere, supervisors can tailor their actions to the risk profile of each provider or product. This makes supervision more efficient, ensures proportionality, and allows regulators to adapt quickly to new innovations while still protecting consumers and maintaining financial stability.

2) Supervisors can face several challenges when creating and applying a risk assessment method forDFS Data may be limited or unreliable, making it hard to measure risks clearly. New technologies and products appear quickly, so risks change faster than traditional methods can keep up. Supervisory agencies may also lack enough skilled staff or resources to handle complex assessments. In places with more than one regulator, coordination can be difficult, and supervisors must balance goals like financial inclusion, consumer protection, and stability..
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Lyonah Murungi Murungi - Group 4
1.A risk‑oriented supervisory model helps regulators handle the fast‑evolving DFS landscape by channeling their oversight toward the entities and activities that carry the most significant potential risks.
2. Designing a DFS risk‑assessment methodology can be difficult because supervisors often lack specialized digital‑finance expertise, face inconsistent data flows, must assess complex technology‑driven business models, and operate with limited institutional capacity.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Damaris Kasyoka Mwaniki - Group 3
1.Adopting a risk-based approach assists supervisors to allocate limited resources effectively by systematically assessing and prioritising risks across DFS providers. This ensures that there is effective and inclusive supervision.
2.Challenges supervisors face when developing and implementing risk assessment methodology include diverse business models, data gaps, rapid technological developments and interconnectivity of devices.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Faith Fxentirimam Envuladu - Group 1
1. A risk-based approach is like having a superpower for a supervisor, they focus on the big treats and keep the DFS ecosystem safe. Adopting a risk-based approach allows the supervisors to focus on the areas that pose a greater treat to integrity and stability of the DFS ecosystem, which most time their actors are wide in rage, the models of business and technology.
2. The challenges a supervisor might encounter is in range when developing and implementing a risk assessment methodology for DFS providers. lack of historical data on emerging risks associated with technologies and models of business might pose a big challenge to the supervisor. implementing a risk assessment methodology for DFS providers by a supervisor will definatly come with several challenges like the quality of data and the availability as the DFS provider may not have a robust collection and reporting system to work with.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Benedict Muhiire Hamenya - Group 4
Possible challenges that supervisors in Uganda may face are ever changing and unexpected risks or indicators that were not captured during the initial risk assessment.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Sheena Rebecca Nantumbwe - Group 4
1.A risk-based approach helps supervisors handle DFS complexity by focusing resources on the highest-risk providers and activities, improving efficiency, proportionality, and early risk detection.

2.Challenges include limited data, complex business models, skills gaps, rapid technological change, and ensuring consistent risk assessments across supervisors.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Lucy Kihembo - Group 4
1. Adopting a risk-based approach helps supervisors understand how emerging DFS risks may affect existing risks and the delivery of financial services. In this way, allocation of resources is effectively done based on assessing and prioritising risks across the DFS sector. Resources are limited and should be appropriated based on context of country and associated assessment of risks.
2. Timeliness and accuracy of data collected or availability of this data. this is critical to obtaining quality of data to conduct the risk assessment
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Michael Sserwanga Sserwanga - Group 4
A risk-based approach helps supervisors have a structured method to identify, assess, and prioritise risks across diverse providers enabling supervisors focus their attention on areas that pose the greatest threat to financial stability.

A challenge that may be faced would be the timeliness of the data to be used as data that may be received may be quarterly / annual and not inform the supervisors of the most up to date risks faced by the DFS providers
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Rehan Masood - Group 5
Adopting a risk-based approach helps supervisors manage the growing complexity of digital financial services by allowing them to focus attention and resources where the potential impact on consumers and the financial system is greatest. Instead of applying uniform oversight, supervisors can differentiate between providers based on their business models, scale, interconnectedness, and risk exposures, which is particularly important in fast-evolving ecosystems like those seen around the State Bank of Pakistan where fintechs, EMIs, and banks coexist. This targeted approach improves efficiency, enhances early risk detection, and supports innovation because lower-risk providers are not subject to unnecessarily heavy supervisory burdens, while higher-risk entities receive closer scrutiny.

However, developing and implementing a robust risk assessment methodology for DFS providers is not without challenges. Supervisors often face data gaps or inconsistent reporting, especially from newer or non-bank entities, which makes it difficult to calibrate risk indicators accurately. Rapid technological change can also outpace supervisory frameworks, requiring continuous updates to tools and skills. Another challenge is ensuring internal consistency and objectivity in scoring models so that decisions are transparent and defensible. Finally, resource constraints, including the need for specialized technical expertise in areas such as cloud computing, cybersecurity, and advanced analytics, can slow implementation and limit the depth of risk analysis if not addressed proactively.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Elsabet Getachew Mulugeta - Group 2
1. Risk based supervision help supervisors to allocate resources proportionally and focus on high risk DFS to protect the consumers in case of limited resources.
2. Supervisors might face data challenges and identifying the right risk indicator as RBS is effective if the right risk indicator and risk is identified for applying the right mitigation.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Zedi Muyingo Muyingo - Group 4
As DFS ecosystems grow more complex that is: featuring fintech firms, mobile money operators, digital banks, and partnerships across sectors, a risk-based framework helps supervisors prioritize oversight based on factors such as transaction volumes, systemic importance, cybersecurity exposure, and consumer vulnerability.

In regard to Q2, Supervisors may face a challenge of data gaps & limited technical expertise in areas such as cybersecurity and algorithmic decision-making, and rapidly evolving business models that outpace existing regulatory frameworks.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Agaba Albert Busingye Agaba - Group 4
1. Risk-Based Supervision approach helps supervisors identify the risks faced by DFS, impact of risks by the high risk DFS and efficiently utilise the available resources to mitigate the risks faced be the majority of DFS.
2.The challenges that supervisors may face are differing systemic risks due to different systems used by DFS and the fast-changing technology advancements that the supervisors are not aware or new risks.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de KABIRU MUDASHIRU - Group 1
1. Risk-based approach to supervision allows resources to be deployed to areas of high risk, meaning DFS with a complex operating model won't be supervised the same way as a conventional DFS based on the risk they are carrying. This allows us to better manage resources and focus on the important things

2. The challenges that may be faced include not having a good knowledge of the business of the DFS. As the saying goes, "you cannot supervise what you don't understand". Evolving technology also introduces emerging risks and complex operational models, all of which pose challenges to implementing a risk assessment methodology for DFS providers.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Aliyu Mohammed - Group 1
1. How does adopting a risk-based approach to supervision help supervisors manage the growing complexity of DFS?
By following a systematic way of identifying risks and allocating proportionare resources, risk based approach allows supervisors to manage the growing complexities in the DFS sector.
2.What challenges might supervisors face when developing and implementing a risk assessment methodology for DFS providers?
Skill gap and accurate data gathering are the top challenges. Supervisors need to deploy the risk assessment correctly else the whole methodology might be flawed. To do this, accuracy in data collected is critical.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Muhammad Nabeel Akhtar Akhtar - Group 5
1. A risk-based approach helps supervisors focus time and resources where the risks are highest, rather than treating all DFS providers the same. In a fast evolving ecosystem with new technologies, outsourcing and diverse players, this approach allows supervisors to prioritise institutions which can have more impact in case of failaure. In particular critical third-party dependencies and high impact activities. It makes supervision more flexible and appropriate for the different business models of DFS.
2. Data gaps, limited technical expertise in highly technical areas like cloud computing or AI and rapidly changing risk profiles can make assessments difficult.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Humza Nadeem Jami - Group 5
In Pakistan, the phenomenal growth of RAAST transactions through branchless banking wallets like Easypaisa and JazzCash introduces massive complexity. Adopting a risk-based approach helps us manage this by moving away from uniform oversight. Instead, we can focus our constrained supervisory resources heavily on these dominant, high-volume payment platforms that inherently pose the greatest systemic and consumer risks.
However, implementing a valid risk assessment methodology is exceptionally challenging due to our severe data limitations. Because our financial service providers lack data experts, we face significant inconsistencies in regulatory reporting for new granular datasets. Until industry capacity matures, we must build our methodology incrementally. Rather than demanding perfect data, we should rely initially on basic risk proxies like transaction volumes, and establish standardized reporting templates for a small set of core data elements to gradually improve data integrity.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Shabani Shabani - Group 6
1...To allocate available supervisory resources proportionately by prioritizing DFS providers whose nature, complexity, and business models present higher inherent and residual risks as this enhances supervisory efficiency, strengthens early risk detection, and facilitates proactive intervention.
2...The principal constraint in operationalizing a risk-based framework for DFS supervision lies in data asymmetry.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Doreen Ninsiima - Group 4
1. By adopting a risk based approach, supervisors get to know risks facing DFS providers and how to manage them. It is easy to manage the growing complexities by focusing on risks not already identified. They then shift from a rigid approach to a dynamic one of identifying additional risks.
2. They may fail to provide for all risks DFS providers are likely to face due to developments like new innovations that were not envisaged in the regulatory framework. They may have limited skills and expertise to handle all DFS providers.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Aboo Badhasa Aboma - Group 2
1.Digital Financial Services (DFS) are complex because they involve diverse players (telecoms, fintechs, banks), high-speed transactions, and vast amounts of data. A risk-based approach manages this by: prioritizing resources, by using proportionality, by using dynamic monitoring tools, and by being outcome focused.

2. Key challenges include:
Data Gaps & Quality: DFS creates massive data, but supervisors often lack the "SupTech" (supervisory technology) tools to collect and analyze it in real-time. Traditional reporting templates are often too rigid for digital business models.
Technical Expertise: There is a significant shortage of staff who understand both financial regulation and the technical infrastructure of DFS (e.g., APIs, cloud computing, and blockchain).
Defining Risk Metrics: Determining "weights" for different risks—such as how to weigh a cybersecurity threat against a liquidity risk—is complex and requires constant adjustment.
Institutional Culture: Many regulatory bodies have a "zero-failure" mindset. Moving to a risk-based approach requires accepting that not all risks can be eliminated, which is a major cultural shift for traditional auditors.
Inter-agency Coordination: Since DFS often spans banking, telecommunications, and competition law, coordinating risk assessments across different regulatory bodies can be difficult.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Ahmed Jibrel Yeha - Group 2
1. Risk-based approach helps supervisors to deal with growing complexity of DFS through a proper risk identification process and then identifying impact analysis and rating frisks in order to prioritize supervisory resources in line with their impact and likelihood of occurrence. This can be done through a risk metrics.

2. Main challenges in developing and implementing a risk assessment methodology might be preparing a comprehensive risk assessment plan if it's for the first time, and judgment in estimating the likelihood as well as impact of each risk in order to identify risks that require priority.
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Re: Introduction to Risk-Based Supervision

de Sarim Ali - Group 5
1. A risk-based approach helps supervisors focus their limited resources on the providers and risks that matter most, instead of applying the same level of scrutiny to everyone. In a fast-evolving DFS environment like Pakistan’s, it allows SBP to prioritise high-impact providers, emerging risks (like cyber and fraud), and areas that could affect financial stability or consumer protection, while still supporting innovation and inclusion.
2. One major challenge is ensuring access to high-quality, consistent data across different types of DFS providers. It can also be difficult to design a risk matrix that properly captures technology, operational, and consumer risks, especially as business models evolve quickly.