The Central Bank of Sri Lanka wants to develop a blockchain-based know-your-customer (KYC) platform.Â
In an open call posted to its website Nov. 29, the bank announced that it is searching for tech companies who can build it a âproof of conceptâ shared KYC system for its banking industry.
âThe increasing demand for digitalised financial services has created an opportunity for Sri Lanka to evaluate the possibility of adopting Blockchain Technology to further advance Sri Lankaâs financial sector,â the bankâs invitation to apply read.
The project appears to be a collaboration between Sri Lankaâs central bank and the Sri Lankan tech sector at large, as it involves âexpertsâ from Sri Lankaâs tech finance and tech industries.Â
A âshared KYCâ system as outlined by the press release would allow commercial banks and the central government to share and update customer data on a blockchain.Â
âIt is expected that this would facilitate several potential use-cases that will increase efficiencies in the financial sector,â and âhelp increase financial inclusion in Sri Lanka,â the release said.Â
But the release is otherwise short on details. The bank will share the KYC platformâs âhigh-level designâ with the selected candidate: a company with at least two years of experience and a âproven track record of developing and launching mobile applications.â
The open call comes as Sri Lanka further brings itself on par with global financial regulatory standards.Â
In October, it was removed from the Financial Action Task Forceâs (FATF) anti-money laundering/counter the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) âstrategic deficienciesâ blacklist, indicating that the country had bolstered its defenses since placed on the list in Nov. 2017.
âThe FATF welcomes Sri Lankaâs significant progress in improving its AML/CFT regime and notes that Sri Lanka has strengthened the effectiveness of its AML/CFT regime,â the global financial watchdog said in October.