English

DLT Compliance Reporting

Computers and Society 2022-06-08 v1 Human-Computer Interaction

Abstract

The IS discourse on the potential of distributed ledger technology (DLT) in the financial services has grown at a tremendous pace in recent years. Yet, little has been said about the related implications for the costly and highly regulated process of compliance reporting. Working with a group of representatives from industry and regulatory authorities, we employ the design science research methodology (DSR) in the design, development, and evaluation of an artefact, enabling the automated collection and enrichment of transactional data. Our findings indicate that DLT may facilitate the automation of key compliance processes through the implementation of a "pull-model", in which regulators can access compliance data in near real-time to stage aggregate exposures at the supranational level. Generalizing our preliminary results, we present four propositions on the implications of DLT in compliance. The findings contribute new practical insights on the topic of compliance to the growing IS discourse on DLT.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2206.03270,
  title  = {DLT Compliance Reporting},
  author = {Henrik Axelsen and Johannes Rude Jensen and Omri Ross},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2206.03270},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

Regulatory reporting, DLT, Compliance, Blockchain, Governance, 3 lines of defense, DSR, Design Science Research, EU supervisory data strategy, supervision

R2 v1 2026-06-24T11:41:59.764Z