Article contributed by Alina Enache, Allevo Sales Manager, and Mihai Guiman, Vice-president FINkers United.</p> Last Wednesday, Sibos’ Open Theater (OT) hosted Allevo’s invited debate “Financial Infrastructures for Public Administrations”, a session focused on rationalizing the state’s payments service. Alina Enache, Allevo Sales Manager, and Mihai Guiman, Vice-president FINkers United, jointly presented how using specialized open source software applications leads to streamlining the operations of public institutions, to mitigate their operational risk and to offer a platform to scale-up delivered services.</p> A couple of years ago, Allevo embraced a major cultural change: it departed from the controlled distribution of the company’ software applications, and chose instead to freely share them. It is the company’s credo that this business model shift will alleviate the partnership in complementarity, will create a shared innovation platform for processing financial transactions along the entire supply chain, and, not least important, will potentiate the fundamental value of business ethics in intellectual property (IP) related trades.</p> While in the financial industry we are aware about the smaller traction rate of open source software compared to other critical industries such as health care, education, automotive, utilities or even the public sector, we bank on the chance that market players (both solution providers and beneficiaries) will evaluate how they can architect their operations based on the freely available FinTP, the financial transactions processing application openly published by Allevo. Another important driver relates to financial institutions’ (FIs) business model. If, for instance, financial inclusion is their core business, than commodity solutions become instrumental in achieving the right level of accessibility.</p> Countries with a poorer level of banking services or with a less mature banking system can be subject to governmental policies or investment to enlarge financial inclusion. Furthermore, governments – which are generally speaking the largest corporation in a country – ‘employ’ (directly or indirectly, the latter including retired persons, beneficiaries of subsidies or social assistance, etc.) massively: in some cases up to 30% of the population is on their payroll; this in itself represents a powerful enough reason to look for better efficiency of their own operations.</p> The more than ten years of fruitful partnership between Allevo and the Romanian State Treasury, a period during which we handled their most important financial operations, lead us to conceptually develop this into a full-fledged solution. The OT session at Sibos addressed a proposed application to centrally manage all public administration payments – which can be extended to tax collection, public debt or public funds management.</p> Unlike corporate or banks’ treasuries, the State Treasury is a zero risk operation; any solution should ensure human error containment. Furthermore, functional, technological and highly scaling (according to the evolving needs) data repositories should be warranted, while transparently interoperating with the business community’s members (i.e. with FIs).</p> Our solution is built around FinTP, architected as a service hosted by a Public Administration private cloud, as depicted in the picture.</p> </p> FinTP is configured to fulfil the budget allocation, bulk or urgent payments issuing, and end-to-end tracking and reconciling – as shown by the numbered arrows suggesting the operational flows. FinTP also helps present beneficiary public institutions’ reports based on the settled payments, including liquidity reports and forecasts based on account(s) balance.</p> In the particular case of Romania, the State Treasury acts as a direct participant to the electronic payment system in order to communicate with commercial banks, and directly connects to the RTGS or ACH systems, either through the SWIFT Network or a dedicated Proprietary Network.</p> To sum it up, the main advantages of this architecture implementation are:</p> Straight-Through Processing (STP)</li> Operational risk containment</li> Reduced settlement time</li> Reduced operational cost (cash is expensive)</li> Automatic accounting reconciliation</li> Cash flow forecast</li> Improved user experience</li> Security and confidentiality of information (by safely exchanging sensitive information over private secured networks, instead of moving paper or exchanging emails)</li> Eliminating delays in paying salaries, when public institution accounts at commercial banks are subject to seizure due to possible legal disputes</li> The solution can be extended in the future to offer a wider range of functionalities (e.g. extension for distribution/collection channels on electronic channels like M-PESA Vodafone, mobile wallets, Apple Pay etc.), with a direct result of increased tax collection and offering a more consistent service for the citizens both as beneficiary and as payer. </li> </ul>This article is an open invitation to BOOSTing together any particular element of the financial services supply chain, and a call to join our FINkers United community debates.</p> </p> Related links:</strong></p> Official page of the open community </a>(FINkers United) around the FinTP project, the first application for processing financial transactions available under free open source GPL v3 license.</li> </svg> finkers_united_for_dummies_brochure.pdf </a> </p> </div> </div> </li> Building an open source community</a>, by Mihai Guiman </li> </ul>