Open banking and cross-border payment connectivity across India, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Singapore are enhancing efficiency, strengthening data governance and accelerating regional financial integration under structured regulatory oversight.
Open banking frameworks in India, the United Arab Emirates and Singapore are reshaping interactions between banks, fintech firms and consumers. These systems allow customers to share financial data securely with licensed third parties under explicit consent, enabling innovation in lending, payments and financial services while maintaining supervisory oversight.
In India, the account aggregator model enables customers to access and share financial records across institutions, supporting credit expansion and financial inclusion. The UAE has introduced regulated open finance frameworks to foster competition while safeguarding system integrity. Singapore relies on industry-led API standards to ensure interoperability and secure data transmission.
Although implementation structures vary, the shared objective is to strengthen customer control over financial data while preserving regulatory protection and operational resilience.
Cross-border payments increase efficiency and transparency
Cross-border payment connectivity between India, the UAE and Singapore enhances transaction speed and traceability, particularly for retail remittances and small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) transfers.
Live retail payment links, interoperable infrastructure and digital identity verification mechanisms reduce reliance on slower correspondent banking channels. For SMEs operating between South Asia and the Gulf region, faster settlement cycles alleviate working capital pressure and improve liquidity visibility.
Greater transparency in transaction costs, instant traceability and operational predictability strengthen trust and reliability in regional payment corridors.
Open banking and cross-border payments improve regional banking
Figure 1. Comparison of open banking and cross-border payment approaches
| Area | India | United Arab Emirates | Singapore |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open banking structure | Account aggregator framework | Regulated open finance framework | Industry-led API collaboration |
| Data governance | Consent-based sharing | Regulatory oversight with standards | Standardised API guidelines |
| Cross-border focus | Retail remittance corridors | Gulf-Asia transfer corridors | Bilateral instant payment linkages |
| Primary objective | Financial inclusion and credit access | Competitive innovation and integration | Interoperability and system resilience |
| Institutional impact | Data-driven lending growth | Ecosystem expansion | Collaborative infrastructure development |
Source: BankQuality
Regional integration relies on governance and risk management
While open banking and cross-border payment systems enhance operational efficiency, they introduce risks relating to data confidentiality, cybersecurity and third-party dependency. Banks must implement real-time monitoring, structured escalation protocols and comprehensive audit trails across both domestic and international channels.
Cross-jurisdictional regulatory coordination ensures innovation does not undermine financial stability. India’s market scale, the UAE’s financial accessibility and Singapore’s coordinated infrastructure represent complementary strategies that gradually reduce structural barriers between markets while maintaining regulatory discipline.
Collectively, these frameworks advance regional financial integration without replacing traditional institutions, strengthening efficiency and resilience across interconnected banking ecosystems.