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Tuesday 25 March 2025 5:23 am  |  Updated:  Monday 24 March 2025 2:49 pm

The FCA will boost growth by being a smarter regulator

By: Nikhil Rathi

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Nikhil Rathi, chief executive of the FCA.
The FCA boss has written to the Treasury Committee on the motor finance row.

The Financial Conduct Authority is prioritising growth and fighting financial crime as chief executive Nikhil Rathi unveils a new five-year strategy

Tomorrow the Chancellor will deliver her Spring Statement. Among the blizzard  of figures, it’s likely we will hear one word more than any other: growth.  

The government has made growth their number one mission. And growth  matters. Without it, there is less money for public services and less in people’s  pockets. Living standards won’t rise.  

At the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), our work has long contributed to growth by enabling trusted, liquid markets, boosting competition, reducing financial crime  and ensuring consumers can confidently engage with products they need. In the  last year alone, we have delivered reforms to strengthen the UK’s wholesale  markets and make it easier for businesses to attract investment.  

And we are going much further. We recently set out to the Prime Minister almost  50 measures we will take forward to support long-term, sustained growth. Initiatives to unlock more capital for businesses, accelerate innovation, reduce  regulatory burdens, enable more firms to start-up and grow, boost exports of  financial services and provide greater certainty and predictability to support  business confidence and secure overseas investment.  

Today, we have confirmed that supporting growth will be one of four priorities in our new five-year strategy, along with helping consumers, fighting crime and becoming a smarter regulator.  

Consumers must make often complex financial decisions. We will help them  navigate their financial lives by ensuring they get the right information and  support. Our ground-breaking consumer duty, which sets a higher standard of  consumer protection, already means firms have to act to deliver good outcomes  for their customers. We will enable more people to benefit from financial  guidance, so they can make the most of their pensions and invest with greater  confidence. And we will drive better value for money in workplace pensions,  encouraging schemes to invest for longer-term returns, boosting individual nest  eggs and economic growth. 

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Fighting financial crime

We have made good progress in the collective fight against financial crime which  is a drain on growth and damages consumer confidence. Over the last two years,  we’ve charged more people with criminal offences than ever before and reduced  our investigation times. We are harnessing technology to better identify scams  and stop them sooner. We are tackling misleading financial promotions at scale.  With partners, we’ve slowed the growth in investment fraud and we will go  further to disrupt crime. We will better support the firms we regulate to be an  effective line of defence. And our new Firm Checker tool will help consumers  easily check they are using an authorised firm and avoid scams.  

The way we operate can clear the way to greater innovation and investment.  We’re more quickly authorising firms that meet our high standards. And we’ll  continue to work smarter, investing in our technology, people and systems.  

Success on one priority spurs success on the others. Becoming a more efficient and effective regulator helps us fight crime. That builds people’s trust, giving them the confidence to take informed risks so they can better withstand a financial shock or save for retirement.  

Those savings can be turned into capital for businesses to invest and expand  which then supports growth. 

We will deliver at a pace that matches the urgency of the UK’s economic  challenges. Since I wrote to the Prime Minister in January, we’ve already taken  steps to help get more people on the housing ladder and opened a debate on  whether we should remove the £100 contactless limit to make payments easier  and spur innovation. And today we’re announcing ways we will simplify our rules  to remove burdens on firms, while maintaining high standards. 

By embracing the push for growth, we aren’t walking away from our primary  objectives of protecting consumers, safeguarding market integrity and  promoting competition. We can and will fulfil each, and by continually  challenging ourselves on whether we are getting the balance right, go even  further to improve lives.  

Nikhil Rathi is the chief executive of the Financial Conduct Authority

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