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A retail CBDC or “enhanced” digital money would support the singleness of money and settlement finality, Andrew Bailey said, but crypto isn’t money.
Andrew Bailey, a Bank of England (BOE) governor, delivered a speech July 10 in which he moved smoothly from the central bank’s efforts to control inflation and maintain public trust in financial institutions to why cryptocurrencies are not money. Instead of cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, he would prefer “enhanced digital money.”
The spate of bank failures in the United States and Switzerland earlier this year revealed issues of the singleness of money and settlement finality, Bailey said. Both cryptocurrencies and stablecoins fail basic tests of singleness and settlement finality, he said, without elaborating. “They are not money,” Bailey said. The passage of the Financial Services and Markets Act would bring stablecoins into line, however.
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey says inflation is likely to drop “markedly” this year and that the full impact of rate increases has yet to hit the economy https://t.co/kntdoEKYPr
— Bloomberg Economics (@economics) July 10, 2023
Digital money, as it already exists, “entirely held in IT systems,” could be enhanced to become “a unit of money to which there is the capability to attach a lot more executable actions, for instance, contingent actions in so-called smart contracts,” Bailey said.
Related: Bank of England governor questions need for digital pound
A central bank digital currency (CBDC) would also be a form of enhanced digital money, Bailey said. “There is no reason that I can think of which makes well-designed enhanced digital money the sole preserve of central banks,” he added, but a CBDC would present distinct advantages:
“Our main motivation for a retail CBDC would be to promote the singleness of money by ensuring that the public always has the option of going into fully functional central bank money that can be used in their everyday lives.”
Bailey had a different view of wholesale CBDCs. The BOE has just upgraded its Real-Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) system. Bailey said:
“This puts us in a very strong position to deliver solutions which can integrate central bank digital money in RTGS with tokenized transactions. We think this is the fastest and most efficient route to take.”
That is without creating a wholesale CBDC, it seems. Bailey added that “cash is here to stay.”
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A major study between the Bank for International Settlements and the Bank of England found that a retail central bank digital currency could make peer-to-peer payments cheaper and easier.
The Bank of England (BoE) is a step closer to launching its central bank digital currency (CBDC) dubbed “Britcoin” following the conclusion of a trial study called Project Rosalind.
The Bank for International Settlements and the BoE launched the joint experiment in July 2022 to explore how prototypes of an application programming interface (API) could be implemented in retail CBDC transactions.
A June 16 report that summed up phase two of Project Rosalind found a CBDC could make payments between individuals cheaper and more efficient while allowing firms to create new financial products that work to reduce fraudulent financial activity.
Overall, the study developed 33 API functionalities and explored “more than 30 retail CBDC use cases.”
In addition to looking at how a CBDC would function on smartphones, retail vendors and online stores, the study also explored the concept of “programmability” — a term that refers to customizing digital money to behave in specific ways once certain conditions are met.
CBDC programmability has been met with considerable skepticism, as critics claim a CBDC could be programmed to “work against” those who use it.
Overall, the study concluded a “well-designed” API layer could enable a central bank to interact with the private sector to “safely provide” retail CBDC payments.
Project Rosalind, from the #BISInnovationHub London Centre & @bankofengland, explored how a universal and extensible #API layer could connect central bank and private sector infrastructures and facilitate retail #CBDC payments https://t.co/HL7EmI7RWx pic.twitter.com/kDeo0yhrsR
— Bank for International Settlements (@BIS_org) June 16, 2023
“The Rosalind experiment has advanced central bank innovation in two key areas: by exploring how an API layer could support a retail CBDC system and how it could facilitate safe and secure CBDC payments through a range of different use cases,” said Francesca Road, head of the BIS London Innovation Hub in a press release.
Despite the positive findings yielded in Project Rosalind, BoE Deputy Governor Jon Cunliffe said a final decision on if the country would launch a CBDC is still “some years” away.
Related: Privacy should be considered in ‘potential retail CBDC’ — Treasury official
According to a June 16 Bloomberg report, Cunliffe told attendees of Politico’s Global Tech Day conference that the odds of a CBDC project going ahead currently stand at “seven out of ten.”
On the same day the findings from Project Rosalind were released, enterprise blockchain Quant Network announced its role as a vendor in the study. The announcement saw the price of Quant’s native QNT (QNT) token surge more than 20% from $96 to $117 within 12 hours.
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The lawmaker said the regulation will need to be both “pragmatic” and “proportionate” to ensure economic growth is maximized.
The United Kingdom could lay out digital asset regulation within 12 months a British lawmaker claimed, saying the country wants to capitalize on the benefits that blockchain can bring to the private sector and economy.
In an April 17 CNBC interview, Andrew Griffith, the economic secretary to the U.K. Treasury said the long-term vision is to “let firms make the most of the opportunities from crypto assets” with sound crypto regulation.
For the first time in “decades,” Griffith claimed the U.K. government is now well-positioned to regulate crypto in a “pragmatic” and “proportionate” manner and appeared to make reference to the U.K.’s exit from the European Union:
“I think over the next 12 or so months is the window. We've got this great asset in the U.K., we've got control back of a rule book — not something the U.K. has had for decades — so we've got the ability to move in an agile and proportionate way.”
It led the lawmaker to assert that the U.K. is now in a “growth” mindset to maximize the economic efforts brought by tech innovation in the private sector.
Griffith explained the crypto regulatory framework would mix existing financial asset laws with new crypto-specific rules.
“Wherever possible we want to see the same asset regulated in the same way, but there are some additional opportunities in the crypto asset or distributed ledger space and we want to take advantage of that.”
He cited settlement using fiat-backed cryptocurrencies as an example which was included in the financial services bill. “So that's coming even sooner than the broader regulatory framework,” he added.
Related: Digital pound could co-exist with private stablecoins — UK central bank
Griffith said a potential rollout of the U.K.’s proposed central bank digital currency (CBDC) — nicknamed “Britcoin” by the public — has a much longer “lead time” and therefore won’t be seen within the next year.
Griffith added he wants to see a policy debate regarding privacy and the technology of the digital pound “thrashed out” to ensure that all concerns are addressed:
“If you're going to have a sovereign digital currency you've got to have the highest level of resilience and infrastructure, so that's not going to happen overnight.”
Brian Armstrong, the chief of crypto exchange Coinbase, met with Griffith earlier this week while he was in London to give a speech on how the U.K. could “turbocharge” its crypto sector and ultimately become an "innovation hub for the Web3 economy.”
Great meeting today with UK Economic Secretary and City Minister @griffitha.
— Brian Armstrong (@brian_armstrong) April 17, 2023
The UK is moving fast on sensible crypto regulation to both drive economic growth AND consumer protection. Excited to keep investing in the UK. pic.twitter.com/478PQSLmDe
Coinbase's crypto hub aspirations for Britain are in line with the views of prime minister Rishi Sunak who explained last year while serving as finance minister that he would like to see the U.K. become a crypto hub.
Dubai, Singapore and recently Hong Kong are some regions that have made pushes to become crypto hubs.
The United States, on the other hand, has considerably stepped up crypto-related enforcement action since Gary Gensler was sworn in as chair of the Securities Exchange Commission in April 2021.
Magazine: Crypto regulation: Does SEC Chair Gary Gensler have the final say? – Cointelegraph Magazine
The central bank wants an e-GBP to be retail-focused and could form part of a “mixed payments economy” alongside cryptocurrency stablecoins.
The United Kingdom is a step closer to launching a central bank digital currency (CBDC) after releasing a consultation paper explaining the proposed digital pound, which the public has nicknamed “Britcoin.”
The 116-page consultation paper was jointly released on Feb. 7 by the Bank of England (BoE) and the U.K. Treasury. A technology working paper was also released delving into the technical and economic design considerations.
Despite the rise of privately-issued stablecoins in recent years, the paper said that CBDCs such as the digital pound can co-exist in what they expect to be a “mixed payments economy.”
“In much the same way that cash exists alongside private money, the digital pound does not need to be a dominant form of money in order to meet its public policy objectives. The digital pound could exist alongside other forms of money, including stablecoins.”
While the BoE and the Treasury hope to have a digital pound launched by 2025 “at the earliest,” at this stage, they’re still not 100% certain that it will be launched at all.
“The Bank and HM Treasury consider a digital pound is likely to be needed in the UK though no decision to introduce one can be taken at this stage,” the paper stated.
The paper explained the primary motivator behind launching the digital pound is to ensure U.K. central bank money remains “an anchor for confidence and safety” in the country’s monetary system and to “promote innovation, choice, and efficiency in domestic payments.”
To achieve this feat, the e-GBP would need to be largely adopted in the retail ecosystem through a series of “public-private partnerships.”
“For the digital pound to play the role that cash plays in anchoring the monetary system, it needs to be usable and sufficiently adopted by households and businesses.”
Users will be able to access e-GBP by connecting to private sector-run API that in turn connects to the core ledger.
Other programmability features including smart contracts and atomic swaps — which enables assets to move across networks — will be enabled.
While the paper states the private sector would help build such infrastructure, it also considers imposing individual limits between 10,000 to 20,000 British pounds ($12,000 to $24,000) to essentially prevent its use as a savings account:
“A limit on individual holdings would be intended to manage those risks by constraining the degree to which deposits could flow out of the banking system. That is important during the introductory period as we learn about the impact of the digital pound on the economy.”
Privacy concerns that many in the crypto community have voiced were also acknowledged. Without going into detail, the paper stated an e-GBP would be subject to “rigorous standards” of privacy and data protection.
It further explained that users will “have at least some level of privacy” because transactions will be recorded anonymously on the core ledger.
Related: Bank of England governor questions need for digital pound
The paper outlined, however, that an e-GBP may impact the business models of commercialized banks through what is known as “bank disintermediation” — where fewer deposits are made into commercial banks.
“The digital pound would not fundamentally alter the traditional channels of money creation, but it might affect monetary stability. [...] Bank disintermediation might affect the transmission of monetary policy to the real economy,” the consultation paper stated.
The central bank also believes the digital pound could bring about more financial inclusivity among the U.K. population.