Abstract

FinTech transforms cross-border payments from expensive, slow processes to cheaper, faster alternatives. Digital payment systems now handle more remittances and small transactions through official channels, with growth expected through the early 2030s. These changes affect how capital moves globally—funds flow more quickly and react faster to market signals. Stablecoins and cryptocurrencies create new payment routes that challenge traditional currency controls and money laundering prevention. Governments respond with updated payment regulations, instant settlement networks, open banking policies, and digital currency trials. This paper examines how technology and regulation interact in cross-border finance, proposing better international cooperation, tech-enabled oversight, stronger domestic systems, and consumer safeguards to capture efficiency gains while maintaining financial stability.