2026-04-30 10:06:46 UTC / 路透社
作者:皮特·施罗德、塔蒂亚娜·鲍策、米歇尔·普莱斯
2026年4月30日 美国东部时间上午10:06 更新于1小时前
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2026年4月22日,美国财政部长斯科特·贝森特在华盛顿国会山出席参议院拨款委员会金融服务与一般政府小组委员会听证会,就特朗普总统提交的2027财年财政部预算请求作证。路透社/安娜贝尔·戈登/资料图
- 内容摘要
- 银行家们表示,他们对可能出台的行政命令要求内容毫不知情
- 智库警告该命令的实施成本可能高达数十亿美元
- 专家和行业人士指出银行将面临重大IT、法律和执法挑战
- 该命令可能对低收入美国人造成不成比例的影响
华盛顿,4月30日(路透社)——美国多家银行表示,他们对白宫预计将出台的一项要求银行收集客户公民身份或移民身份数据的行政命令基本一无所知。行业高管警告称,这项指令将代价高昂且极具破坏性。
财政部长斯科特·贝森特本月告诉媒体Semafor,拜登政府正在起草这项行政命令,但未提供细节。《华尔街日报》今年2月首次报道了此事,将该举措描述为政府打击非法居住在美国的移民行动的延伸。
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据三位知情人士透露,银行游说团体最初在与政府官员的会面中反对这项举措,警告其在操作和法律层面都将十分复杂、成本高昂,并可能导致数百万人无法开设银行账户。
但知情人士表示,最近几周,银行与政府之间几乎没有沟通,尽管这项潜在要求影响重大,但银行方面仍基本处于信息盲区。
中右翼智库美国行动论坛上月估计,仅针对新账户收集公民身份数据,每年就可能让银行业承担26亿至56亿美元的成本。
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“银行面临的后勤挑战极为严峻,”哥伦比亚法学院教授凯瑟琳·贾奇说道。
“总体而言,这项举措对银行来说是坏消息,对普通美国民众来说则更糟。即使是美国公民,整个流程也可能带来极大麻烦。”
这一举措是特朗普政府在追求更广泛政策目标时给银行业制造潜在麻烦的又一例证,尽管政府正在放松其他它认为抑制放贷的监管规定。今年1月,特朗普突然呼吁信用卡机构设置利率上限,以解决生活成本问题,他还指责华尔街银行歧视保守派,而银行方面否认了这一指控。
一位白宫官员在电子邮件中表示,政府仍在探索保护银行体系免受“不可接受的信贷风险”的方法,并确保“所有美国人都能负担得起银行服务”。
美国财政部发言人未回应置评请求。贝森特告诉Semafor,了解谁在使用银行系统并非不合理。
要求匿名的银行高管们正在讨论敏感的监管议题。
IT系统的全面整改
现有的“了解你的客户”监管规定要求银行核实客户身份,并收集包括社保号或税务识别号在内的其他基本个人数据。但并未要求放贷机构收集和核实公民身份或移民身份信息。
银行表示,落实这项要求将需要对其文件处理和IT系统进行全面整改,还需要对一线员工进行大量培训,使其能够识别和评估美国国务院列出的180多种不同类型签证的有效性。
一位零售银行高管表示,为新客户核实此类文件将极其繁重,而为现有客户这样做几乎“不可能”,其他高管也认同这一观点。
一位消息人士和另一位顶级银行家表示,如果监管机构认定银行未能充分核查客户文件,这项要求还将给银行带来巨大的新执法风险。
银行监管数据显示,美国现有个人银行账户数以亿计。但据国务院数据显示,约有一半美国人没有护照,纽约大学法学院智库布伦南司法中心2024年的研究显示,超过9%的适龄投票美国公民,即2130万人,无法随时提供公民身份证明。
此外,许多账户持有人,尤其是已婚女性,出生证明上的姓名可能与当前姓名不同。
对低收入美国人影响更大
银行家和律师表示,即使该命令仅针对新账户,这些文件缺口仍将带来挑战,尤其是对于可能无力承担出生证明或护照费用的低收入美国人。
两位知情人士表示,大多数银行可能会限制在线开户。这也会让农村银行服务空白区的美国人——根据消费者金融保护局的研究,这些地区的家庭平均收入较低——更难开设银行账户。
“最初的实施将需要大量额外工作,因为没有人习惯遵循这一流程,”专门从事反洗钱合规的律师罗斯·德尔斯顿说道。“然后银行就有可能开始拒绝客户,这可能会对某些群体造成歧视性影响。”他补充道。
要使行政命令具有法律效力,财政部或银行监管机构通常需要制定新规则并征求公众反馈,这将给行业另一次机会弱化相关要求。
美国行动论坛监管政策主任丹·戈德贝克是这项潜在成本研究的作者,他表示,目前尚不清楚监管机构可以援引何种法定权力来落实这项命令。
他补充道,这可能会引发“重大法律挑战”。
本文由米歇尔·普莱斯撰写和报道;华盛顿的皮特·施罗德和纽约的塔蒂亚娜·鲍策报道;纽约的梅根·戴维斯和帕里托什·班萨尔补充报道;阿利斯泰尔·贝尔编辑。
我们的标准:路透社信托原则。
US banks left guessing over scope of looming order on citizenship data
2026-04-30 10:06:46 UTC / Reuters
By Pete Schroeder, Tatiana Bautzer and Michelle Price
April 30, 2026 10:06 AM UTC Updated 1 hour ago
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent attends a Senate Appropriations Financial Services and General Government Subcommittee hearing on President Trump’s fiscal year 2027 budget request for the Department of the Treasury, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 22, 2026. REUTERS/Annabelle Gordon/File Photo
- Summary
- Bankers say they are in the dark on what major executive order may require
- Think tank warns order could cost billions of dollars to implement
- Experts and industry cite major IT, legal and enforcement challenges for banks
- Order could disproportionately impact lower-income Americans
WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) – U.S. banks say they are largely in the dark about an expected White House order requiring them to collect data on their customers’ citizenship or immigration status, a directive senior industry executives warn would be costly and disruptive.
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told media outlet Semafor this month that the administration is working on the executive order, but did not provide details. It was first reported in February by the Wall Street Journal, which characterized the effort as an extension of the administration’s crackdown on immigrants living in the United States illegally.
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Bank lobby groups initially pushed back on the effort in meetings with administration officials, warning it would be operationally and legally complex, expensive, and could potentially lead to millions of people becoming unbanked, according to three of the people.
But in recent weeks, banks have had little communication from the administration and say they are largely in the dark, despite the magnitude of the potential requirement, the people said.
Center-right think tank American Action Forum estimated last month that just for new accounts, collecting citizenship data could cost the industry between $2.6 billion and $5.6 billion annually.
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“The logistical challenges for banks are significant,” said Kathryn Judge, a professor at Columbia Law School.
“Overall, the initiative is bad news for banks but worse news for ordinary Americans. Even for citizens, the process could create significant headaches.”
The effort is another example of the Trump administration causing potential headaches for the banking industry in the pursuit of broader policy goals, even as it relaxes other rules it says are stifling lending. In January, Trump blindsided the industry by calling for credit card providers to cap interest rates in a bid to address cost-of-living concerns, and he has targeted Wall Street banks for discriminating against conservatives, a claim they deny.
A White House official said in an email that the administration continues to explore ways to protect the banking system from “unacceptable credit risks and to ensure that banking services remain available and affordable for all Americans.”
A spokesperson for the Treasury Department did not respond to a request for comment. Bessent told Semafor it was not unreasonable to have more information about who is using the banking system.
The bank executives requested anonymity to discuss sensitive regulatory issues.
MASSIVE OVERHAUL OF IT SYSTEMS
Existing know-your-customer regulations require banks to verify a customer’s identity and gather other basic personal data, including Social Security or tax identification numbers. But they do not require lenders to gather and verify citizenship or immigration status information.
Banks say that doing so would entail a massive overhaul of their document processing and IT systems, as well as extensive training for frontline staff so they could identify and assess the validity of more than 180 different types of visas listed by the State Department.
Verifying such documents for new customers would be extremely burdensome, say bankers, but doing so for existing customers would be almost “impossible,” said a fourth source who runs a retail bank, a sentiment echoed by other executives.
The requirement would also create massive new enforcement risks for banks if the authorities decide to pursue lenders for failing to adequately check customer paperwork, said one of the sources and a fifth person who is a top banker.
Bank regulatory data suggests there are hundreds of millions of existing personal U.S. bank accounts. Roughly half of Americans, however, do not have passports, according to State Department data, and more than 9% of American citizens of voting age, or 21.3 million people, do not have readily available proof of citizenship, according to 2024 research by the Brennan Center for Justice, a think tank at NYU School of Law.
And many account-holders, most notably women who have been married, may have different names on their birth certificates.
GREATER IMPACT ON LOWER-INCOME AMERICANS
Even if the order targets only new accounts, those documentation gaps would still create challenges, say bankers and lawyers, especially for lower-income Americans who may struggle to afford birth certificates or passport fees.
Most banks would likely restrict online account opening, two of the people said. That would also make it harder for Americans in rural banking “deserts” — where average household incomes are lower, according to research from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau — to open bank accounts.
“The initial implementation would be a lot of extra work because nobody would be accustomed to following the process,” said Ross Delston, an attorney specializing in anti-money laundering compliance. “And then you run the risk that banks would just start turning customers away,” with a potential discriminatory impact on some groups, he said.
For an executive order to become legally effective, the Treasury or bank regulators would typically have to write new rules and allow public feedback, giving the industry another chance to water down the requirements.
Dan Goldbeck, director of regulatory policy at the American Action Forum, who authored the research on the potential costs, said it was unclear what statutory authority regulators could potentially invoke to implement such an order.
That could open the door to “significant legal challenges,” he added.
Writing and reporting by Michelle Price; Reporting by Pete Schroeder in Washington and Tatiana Bautzer in New York; additional reporting by Megan Davies and Paritosh Bansal in New York; Editing by Alistair Bell
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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