The Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority (QFCRA) signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the Cambridge Judge Business Schools Regulatory Genome Project (CJBS-RGP). The MoU is intended to contribute to the development and promotion of the RGP.
The RGP is a collaboration to develop and support an open information structure that will facilitate the comparative analysis of financial regulations across jurisdictions. It offers an opportunity to reduce fragmentation in the global exchange of regulatory information.
The MoU was officially signed by Dean Mauro Guillen of the Cambridge Judge Business School on behalf of The Chancellor, Master and Scholars of the University of Cambridge and chief executive officer of the QFCRA Michael G Ryan.
Ryan welcomed the signing of the MoU, saying: "We look forward to the establishment of a working relationship with the RGP and contributing to its ongoing development under this MoU. With the increase in information significant to regulatory requirements, the demand to verify and process data efficiently is unprecedented. We are pleased to collaborate with the RPG on this first of many opportunities."
Executive director, Regulatory Genome Project, Dr Giovanni Bandi commented on the MoU, highlighting that "the taxonomies in the Cambridge Regulatory Genome are root taxonomies that categorise obligations to a level that supports the regulatory community with baseline comparative analysis. The input from QFCRA's experts and all other regulators is fundamental to ensure that these taxonomies remain relevant to a broad range of users worldwide."
Under the MoU, QFCRA and CJBS-RGP aim to enhance the use and usefulness of data in regulating the financial services industry through developing taxonomies and mapping regulatory texts into an open machine-readable data repository.
The QFCRA and CJBS-RGP have entered into this MoU in an effort to establish a formal basis for cooperation.
A comprehensive regulatory benchmarking tool developed by CJBS-RGP will make available to the QFCRA regulatory texts from 130 jurisdictions across 11 emerging regulatory themes in the financial services sector to assist the organisation in achieving its policy development objectives.