
Cross-border payments move trillions of dollars every year, yet in many emerging markets they remain slow, expensive, and inefficient.
In his IENYC capstone, Gilles Andrea Raynaud investigates how corridor-specific, compliance-first financial infrastructure can reduce friction, using Bolivia as a real-world case study. The result is a rigorously designed operational model grounded in regulatory analysis, risk assessment, and measurable social impact.
At its core, the capstone asks:
How can technology-enabled FX and payment infrastructure reduce cost and settlement friction in emerging markets while remaining institutionally compliant and commercially viable?
Rather than assuming inefficiency is purely technical, Gilles approached the problem as a systems challenge shaped by regulation, liquidity constraints, correspondent banking limitations, and fragmented compliance processes.
Latin America presents one of the most complex cross-border payment environments globally. Challenges include:

-High FX spreads
-Limited access to hard currency liquidity
-Correspondent banking de-risking
-Slow settlement cycles
-Fragmented AML/KYC compliance processes
Bolivia offered a high-friction corridor for testing infrastructure models. Focusing on a specific market enabled granular regulatory mapping, stakeholder analysis, and risk modeling tailored to real operating conditions.
The capstone unfolded in four structured phases:
Primary research with businesses and organizations identified institutional bottlenecks as the dominant cost drivers.
A detailed review of regulations, capital controls, AML frameworks, and licensing requirements shaped the infrastructure design. Compliance was treated as a design principle, not a constraint.
The project developed a conservative, liquidity-aware model incorporating:
This framework prioritized resilience over speed-to-scale.
The research evaluated settlement time compression, transaction cost optimization, scalability across corridors, and measurable social externalities such as SME enablement and NGO efficiency.

The research surfaced several critical insights:
Gilles credits IENYC’s interdisciplinary approach:
“Cross-border payments sit at the intersection of finance, regulation, geopolitics, liquidity management, and social outcomes. Systems thinking allowed me to model these interactions rather than isolate them.”
Key skills applied included impact measurement, financial modeling, risk management, stakeholder mapping, and institutional governance analysis. Iterative model design and regulatory recalibrations were central to reaching a viable solution.
The project evolved into a practical framework for building compliant, inclusive financial infrastructure. If scaled, it could improve transaction efficiency for:

-SMEs engaged in cross-border trade
-NGOs in constrained funding environments
-Agricultural exporters and smallholder producers
-Multinational firms managing emerging-market exposure
Challenging. Grounded. Transformative.
Challenging in regulatory and liquidity complexity, grounded in conservative modeling and primary research, transformative in reshaping impact-driven financial innovation.
Gilles Raynaud’s capstone embodies IENYC’s mission: bridging global ambition and local action, turning bold research into extraordinary, actionable progress.
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