Hong Kong signs agreement with People’s Bank of China to enhance Faster Payment System
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) has signed an agreement with the Chinese central bank to promote cross-border linkages for the Faster Payment System (FPS), creating a framework for facilitating more commerce and people flows on both sides.
The announcement came after Friday’s meeting between deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) Lu Lei and HKMA’s deputy CEO Howard Lee, where the two exchanged views on deepening financial cooperation between mainland China and Hong Kong.
Enhancements to cross-border payment arrangements to make it easier for Hongkongers to travel, live, work or retire on the mainland have been in the works for some time.
At the end of June, HKMA CEO Eddie Yue Wai-man said in an article that the memorandum of understanding would establish a “cooperative framework” for the linkage, which would provide a “safe, efficient and convenient means for cross-boundary payment and settlement, facilitating economic activities and flows of people between the two places”.
There were no further details on the framework in Friday’s announcement.
The PBOC and HKMA unveiled six policy enhancements in January to support Hong Kong as China’s global financial hub. The measures also include expanding two cross-border trading schemes, the Bond Connect and the Wealth Management Connect mechanisms, as well as e-CNY pilots in Hong Kong and cross-boundary credit referencing collaboration among banks in Hong Kong and on the mainland.
The FPS, launched in 2018 by HKMA to make cross-bank and e-wallet payments easier, operates 24/7 and supports payments in Hong Kong dollars and renminbi. However, direct payments via FPS in mainland China are still a work in progress.
Last December, the HKMA announced an agreement with the Bank of Thailand to allow users of the city’s FPS to make purchases in Thailand, while Thais travelling to Hong Kong could use their local equivalent, PromptPay, at merchants in the city that accepted QR code payments.