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Challenges of competent authority’s AML/CFT risk assessments in practice: No common standard

Garrett Dunker
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Garrett Dunker: Director, FTS Financial Transparency Solutions, Austria

Journal of Financial Compliance, 2021, vol. 5, issue 2, 134-143

Abstract: This paper reveals one of the challenges that Competent Authorities face in performing AML/CFT risk assessments, namely a lack of Common Standard, and identifies the benefits which could be achieved if a risk assessment standard were in broad usage. A standardised AML/CFT risk model that is scalable across sectors and across jurisdictions should have significant near-term and long-lasting advantages and efficiency gains for AML/CFT stakeholders such as supervisors, policy making bodies, reporting entities and SupTech developers. Moreover, global objectives could be achieved such as a worldwide increase of compliance and effectiveness related to the FATF standard, Recommendations 26 and 28 and Immediate Outcome 3. The paper then continues to outline the assumptions and objectives which should be used in forming such a standard and provides an early suggestion for consideration, identifying the pros and cons. The suggested method involves the determination of a sector profile level which would be considered an indication of the probability of ML/TF/PF occurring in a sector. The sector profile categorisation is based on a sector’s complexity, transparency, sophistication and the presence of high-risk activities, to which the assigned level dictates a commensurate number and intensity of risk factors and controls factors that should be present in an AML/CFT risk model. The formation of an AML/CFT risk assessment standard is recognised as a challenging feat and this work aims to form a discussion piece around the topic.

Keywords: AML/CFT; supervision; risk assessment; risk model; standard (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: E5 G2 K2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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