Program Manager, State Secretariat for Economic Affairs SECO
Philippe Brügger is a program manager in the Macroeconomic Support Section at the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs. He oversees development programs targeted at strengthening financial sector development and public financial management in Ukraine and Indonesia and leads the sections work on FinTech and Digital Asset regulation. He holds a Master in Economics and Behavioral Economics from the University of Zurich.
Roundtable Room 2 (Level 2)
Open
Governance, the Architecture & Standards for the Digital Economy: Striving for international connectivity and trust in a fragmented world.
How can governments act locally but support global interconnectivity and the development of the digital economy? What standards, conventions, or infrastructures do we need to adapt or create to enhance access and empower citizens and companies to participate on equal footing in the global digital economy while addressing risks and protecting sovereignty?
Roundtable Room 2 (Level 2)
Open
The case for tokenization varies across asset classes and jurisdictions. The calculus – and speed of adoption of technology - is likely to be different for existing financial centres, tied to traditional financial market infrastructure and where incumbents have significant sway and large parts of the population have access to digital money and financial services, and emerging economies, which can leapfrog. Despite that, the public discussion and the discussion in global fora is heavily shaped by the experience of AEs. This roundtable would aim to address that gap, identifying use cases prevalent in Emerging Market and Developing Economies_ (_EMDEs) and fostering an exchange about options to regulate tokenization. It would be complementary to the work IOSCO has done so far, and supportive of the current workstream on tokenization.
This roundtable will bring together market participants and regulators from select EDME jurisdictions to discuss:
a. Specific use cases for tokenisation in EMDEs
b. Key regulatory and policy considerations, including barriers to tokenisation
c. Regulatory innovation initiatives and challenges of moving from experimentation to regulatory reform
Roundtable Room 2 (Level 2)
Open
The case for tokenization varies across asset classes and jurisdictions. The calculus – and speed of adoption of technology - is likely to be different for existing financial centres, tied to traditional financial market infrastructure and where incumbents have significant sway and large parts of the population have access to digital money and financial services, and emerging economies, which can leapfrog. Despite that, the public discussion and the discussion in global fora is heavily shaped by the experience of AEs. This roundtable would aim to address that gap, identifying use cases prevalent in Emerging Market and Developing Economies_ (_EMDEs) and fostering an exchange about options to regulate tokenization. It would be complementary to the work IOSCO has done so far, and supportive of the current workstream on tokenization.
This roundtable will bring together market participants and regulators from select EDME jurisdictions to discuss:
a. Specific use cases for tokenisation in EMDEs
b. Key regulatory and policy considerations, including barriers to tokenisation
c. Regulatory innovation initiatives and challenges of moving from experimentation to regulatory reform