/cryptocurrency

News and resources on digital currencies, crypto assets and crypto exchanges worldwide.
US falling behind peers on CBDC progress, warns think tank

US falling behind peers on CBDC progress, warns think tank

The United States' slow progress on central bank digital currencies is seeing it fall behind the likes of China, India and the European Union on the future of money, warns think tank The Atlantic Council.

China has ramped up its digital yuan work over the last year, while the ECB is now in the preparation phase for a digital euro and India is seeing a million transactions per day processed by commercial banks throughout the country for the digital rupee.

Yet in the US, the Federal Reserve has been cautious about pushing ahead with pilots and several governors have expressed scepticism about the need for a CBDC. This month, Donald Trump vowed to prevent the creation of a digital dollar if he wins the US presidential election, calling a CBDC a "dangerous threat to freedom".

Josh Lipsky and Ananya Kumar from the Atlantic Council’s GeoEconomics Centre warn that technological payments innovation at the Fed is lagging behind its peers and competitors. As an example, they note that the People' Bank of China has more than 300 people dedicated to CBDC work; the Fed has fewer than 20.

The Council argues that the Fed should grasp the opportunity to set standards and influence constructive developments on the future of CBDCs and payments more generally. In fact, central bankers around the world are asking for the Fed's help.

"In the absence of more US technological models and standards, a fractured system will be constructed with different designs, cybersecurity standards, and varied messaging systems. Instead of faster, cheaper, and safer, money will be more siloed but less secure," write Lipsky and Kumar.

American tardiness is not limited to CBDCs, note the authors, bemoaning a lack of progress on improving cross-border payments and the slow take up of FedNow.

"Between now and next January, Fed officials should do more to accelerate exploration efforts on all of their payment projects, including faster cross-border transfers and CBDCs.

"If they don’t, the future of money may quickly pass them by," conclude Lipsky and Kumar.

Learn more about payments at NextGen Nordics on the 23 April 2024.

Comments: (6)

Ketharaman Swaminathan
Ketharaman Swaminathan - GTM360 Marketing Solutions - Pune 30 January, 2024, 08:38Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

If CBDC passes USA by, it's only a good thing. While CBDC has many Utopian and Dystopian use cases for governments, I've yet to see a single use case that's favorable to citizens. Kudos to Donald Trump for taking an unequivocal stand against CBDC. 

Arshad Noor
Arshad Noor - StrongKey - Cupertino 30 January, 2024, 09:41Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

@Ketharaman,

I do agree with The Atlantic Council that the US is in serious danger of falling behind the EU, China and India. I agree there are lots of policy, procedural and technological issues with the introduction of CBDCs, but I also see a lot of benefits (with the advantage that we know how businesses and consumers will behave in the post-internet era).

I will encourage you to read this blog-post on LI from 2022: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/let-federal-reserve-introduce-cbdc-arshad-noor/ for a perspective on potential benefits.

There are more detailed comments I have provided to the Federal Reserve, starting on page 3 of this PDF: https://www.federalreserve.gov/files/cbdc-public-comments-9-20220624.pdf

Happy to continue this discussion here or on LI.

Ketharaman Swaminathan
Ketharaman Swaminathan - GTM360 Marketing Solutions - Pune 30 January, 2024, 10:08Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

@Arshad Noor:

I had a quick glance at your LinkedIn Post, I couldn't find any here-and-now benefits of CBDC for Citizens. If there are any, please copy-paste them here.

I don't buy benefits after 50 years - height of speculation can be used to justify anything in life and obviously nobody has the time and money to do everything in life.

Furthermore, it's a reality of democracy that anything that requires action from lawmakers must have benefits within one election cycle especially if it's something like CBDC that has clear evils for citizens well before the next election cycle. 

Arshad Noor
Arshad Noor - StrongKey - Cupertino 30 January, 2024, 11:31Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

If voters accept initiatives that must be completed in one election cycle, then they will get the government and life they deserve, Ketharaman. Some of humankind's greatest accomplishments far outlived the innovators' lifetimes - for which all of us should be grateful. Thanks for your thoughts.

Ketharaman Swaminathan
Ketharaman Swaminathan - GTM360 Marketing Solutions - Pune 30 January, 2024, 12:31Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

Problem is some of humankind's greatest grifts from Shiny New Toys have also happened within Wannabe Innovators' lifetimes. So it's futile to judge voters and better to leave it to them to worry about their governments. I'd rather focus on the evils / benefits of CBDC for Citizens. For example:

Evil for Citizen: Citizens think government will cancel CBDC of dissidents. This can happen in the short or medium or long or any term after CBDC is launched. 

What is the benefit of CBDC to Citizen to compensate for this perceived / real evil that can be realized within the same timescale?

Arshad Noor
Arshad Noor - StrongKey - Cupertino 30 January, 2024, 16:47Be the first to give this comment the thumbs up 0 likes

In any country with an authoritarian government/head, there are no protections; so it is futile to discuss this in that context.

In democratic countries, where laws can be established apriori, a set of controls can be established to prevent such failures. However, it is important to remember that not all anomalies can be recognized and addressed apriori. Diligent policymakers will continue to reinforce those protections regularly and fill gaps when identified and where necessary. Witness what the EU is doing with its laws: GDPR, PSD, DMA, etc.

It still needs to be said, that unless consumers/citizens vote with their wallets/votes, even lawmakers and laws can be subverted. Caveat Emptor!

Trending