Britain will soon lay out new plans to regulate 'buy now, pay later' firms like Klarna after delays
Britain's new Labour government will soon set out updated plans to regulate the "buy now, pay later" industry, a government spokesperson told CNBC.
A Treasury department spokesperson said the government will do so "shortly," echoing earlier comments from Tulip Siddiq, the new economic secretary to the U.K. Treasury, to Parliament on Wednesday.
"Regulating Buy Now Pay Later products is crucial to protect people and deliver certainty for the sector," the Treasury spokesperson told CNBC via email Thursday.
Earlier this week, Siddiq, who was selected as the U.K.'s new city minister following the landslide election victory of Keir Starmer's Labour Party, told lawmakers that the new government is "looking to work closely with all interested stakeholders and will set out its plans shortly."
This follows multiple delays to the roadmap for BNPL legislation in Britain. The government first set out plans to regulate the sector in 2021. That followed a review from former Financial Conduct Authority boss Christopher Woolard, which found more than one in 10 BNPL customers were in arrears.
BNPL plans are flexible credit arrangements that enable a consumer to purchase an item and then pay off their debt at a later date. Most plans charge customers a third of the purchase value up front, then take the remaining payments the following two months.
Most BNPL companies make money by charging fees on a per-transaction basis to their merchant partners, as opposed charging interest or late payment fees. Some BNPL firms do charge missed payment fees. But the model isn't standardized across the board.
This disparity in services among different BNPL lenders is partly why campaigners have been calling for regulation. A key reason, though, is that people —