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在上周二的秋季经济声明中,财政部长Chrystia Freeland宣布了政府修改《加拿大支付法》的计划,该法规定了Payments Canada的角色和职责,这是一家负责加拿大支付基础设施的非营利组织。

一天后,联邦政府发布了《零售支付活动法》(RPAA)的最终法规,为该国蓬勃发展的支付行业制定了规则,其中包括高调的国内初创企业,如Neo Financial、Koho和Wealthsimple,以及处理加拿大消费者支付的较大的外国公司。

在秋季经济声明之前,Payments Canada的Tracey Black在她的组织批评者和她对实时铁路的希望方面与The Logic进行了交流。

(聊天机器人翻译:

Payments Canada’s Tracey Black on shaking up the country’s payment system

In last Tuesday’s fall economic statement, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland announced the government’s plans to amend the Canadian Payments Act—the legislation that sets out the roles and responsibilities for Payments Canada, a non-profit organization in charge of Canada’s payment infrastructure.

A day later, the federal government published its final regulations for the Retail Payments Activities Act (RPAA), establishing rules for the country’s burgeoning payments sector, which includes high-profile domestic startups such as Neo Financial, Koho and Wealthsimple, as well as larger foreign companies that handle payments for Canadian consumers.

In the run-up to the fall economic statement, Payments Canada Tracey Black caught up with The Logic on her organization’s critics, and her hopes for the Real-Time Rail.