\Fintech News/ Fintechs are key to sovereignty and democracy, France says French junior minister Cedric O tells fintech entrepreneurs to and work hand in hand with well-established banks to help keep Europe in the global race for finance innovation. By Marie Mawad in Paris 12 October 2020 Credit: French junior minister Cedric O, in a photo from his Twitter account. Credit: French junior minister Cedric O, in a photo from his Twitter account. \Fintech Starling Bank wants to buy a lender By Ryan Weeks 13 January 2021 \Fintech News/ Fintechs are key to sovereignty and democracy, France says French junior minister Cedric O tells fintech entrepreneurs to and work hand in hand with well-established banks to help keep Europe in the global race for finance innovation. By Marie Mawad in Paris 12 October 2020 French junior minister Cedric O told fintech entrepreneurs on Monday to stand up to “big tech”, and work hand in hand with well-established banks to keep Europe in the race for finance innovation. “Developing new technology in the financial sector is a matter of being able to compete on the global stage, but it’s also a matter of sovereignty,” O said in a speech at the opening of the Forum Fintech, attended by entrepreneurs, banks and regulators in Paris. “We need to succeed, or even our democratic sovereignty will be in danger.” The Covid-19 crisis has reinforced the position of technology giants like Apple and Microsoft on the global stage, but O said they could eventually dominate the financial sector too given the amount of data they’re collecting on Europeans. Advertisement Indeed, banks and fintech are in danger of being cut out of the value chain, he warned. “There’s a huge intermediation risk for French banks and for fintechs — that’s why Europe needs to spawn its own innovative players.” He added that collaboration would be the best defence: “France needs to be at the avant-garde of the digital revolution…But we have to work on transforming the entire sector — I don’t think startups can just replace all traditional banks.” The minister also warned that falling behind in areas like payments and cryptocurrencies could have even particularly dire consequences, suggesting that failing to keep up with innovation there could go so far as to impact democracy. “What’s more sovereign than a currency?,” O asked. On a brighter note, French fintechs raised €700m in 2019, which is twice as much as the year before. While France is behind other countries, including neighbouring UK, the boost in funding could be a sign the country is catching up, O said. Advertisement Help Sifted get bigger and better (and get a sneak peak at our future plans). Please take our reader survey. Take the survey Terms of Use Related Articles Only 21% of tech unicorns are led by women, report shows By Freya Pratty Click here to read more Black entrepreneurs receive just 0.24% of capital in the UK By Freya Pratty Click here to read more Systemic barriers for minority business owners persist, report shows By Freya Pratty Click here to read more Time to stop using the term BAME By Erika Brodnock and Johannes Lenhard Click here to read more Get the best of Sifted in your inbox By entering your email you agree to Sifted’s Terms of Use Sign up to \Future Proof Sifted’s weekly \Corporate Innovation roundup email By entering your email you agree to Sifted’s Terms of Use Most Read 1 \Fintech Starling Bank wants to buy a lender 2 \Startup Life Chief of staff: the ‘must-have hire’ for startup CEOs? 3 \Fintech The 10 fastest fintechs to reach billion dollar valuations 4 \Venture Capital Rich Europeans need to invest 10% of their money into tech and stop buying stupid stuff like hotels 5 \Public and Academic European Commission makes its first equity investments into startups Join the conversation Subscribe Notify of new follow-up comments new replies to my comments
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