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CBDCs China Crypto News

China Rolls Out CBDCs for Public Transport

China’s central bank digital currency, the e-CNY, is now being piloted in several cities for use in public transport and schooling.

Expanding the Eyes of the State

China has officially begun rolling out the next round of its CBDC program, most evidently in the city of Guangzhou, where it is now possible to pay for public transport with central bank-issued digital yuan.

In order to do so, passengers are required to download an app, deposit funds and scan a QR code in the bus terminal to make payment. A similar program has reportedly been launched in the city of Ningbo, becoming the ninth municipality in China to do so.

The communist government has rapidly expanded the e-CNY’s application this year, most notably in the form of government-sponsored airdrops designed to stimulate after prolonged lockdowns.

Since launching its CBDC program, one online retailer noted it had seen around 900 million CNY (US$131.6 million) in transactions since accepting e-CNY. In total, approximately 830 billion ($US121.4 billion) worth of e-CNY transactions were recorded in the first five months of 2022 alone.

CBDCs, Not as Advertised

As whistleblower Edward Snowden correctly points out, CBDCs, while marketed as digital currencies, are in fact much more sinister. Properly understood, CBDCs are best conceived as programmable money capable of forming the base layer of a social credit score.

In a dystopic world where all money is essentially a smart contract, government gets to decide what it wants you to do, and then uses sticks and carrots to optimise compliance with its agenda. It’s no surprise, then, that authoritarian regimes such as the Chinese Communist Party have been so quick to embrace them:

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Australia CBDCs Crypto News

Australian Central Bank Goes Public With CBDC Trial

Last year, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) pronounced that it “saw no strong case” for a retail central bank digital currency (CBDC). In a curious about-turn, the RBA has now announced it is “exploring use cases”.

A few alarms bells have been raised, to say the least:

CBDCs in a Nutshell

A CBDC is best understood as a digital form of fiat currency issued and regulated by a central bank (rather than retail banks, as is the case today). They can be classified as either retail or wholesale.

Retail CBDCs are issued directly to people and companies. By contrast, wholesale CBDCs are issued to financial institutions such as banks. The former are said to be useful as a mechanism to deliver “helicopter money” or universal basic income, whereas the latter are suitable for interbank transfers.

Risks and Benefits

Over 100 governments are at some stage of experimenting or implementing CBDCs, and cite their numerous benefits to include:

  • technological efficiency – money transfers and payments can be made in real time, directly from the payer to the payee;
  • reduced risk for merchants as settlement is instant;
  • financial inclusion – in that any legal resident or citizen can be provided with a free or low-cost basic bank account;
  • preventing illicit activity by tracking each unit of CBDC since all transactions are traceable;
  • improved tax collection – taxes can simply be deducted at source;
  • combating crime – the blockchain is transparent, making it easy to track criminal activities; and
  • improved safety – as carrying physical cash constitutes a risk.

However, enormous privacy and surveillance concerns have been raised from the outset, with critics describing CBDCs as “programmable money” capable of being switched on and off at the whim of centralised authorities. It is considered to be the seed of a social credit score, as once you are able to control the money, you become capable of controlling the citizenry through behavioural economics, as is the case in China:

What Is the RBA Up To?

According to the announcement, the research project is a collaboration between the RBA and the Digital Finance Cooperative Research Centre (DFCRC) to focus on the uses for, and potential economic benefits of, a CBDC:

The project, which is expected to take about a year to complete, will involve the development of a limited-scale CBDC pilot that will operate in a ring-fenced environment for a period of time and is intended to involve a pilot CBDC that is a real claim on the Reserve Bank.

RBA announcement

The announcement adds: “Interested industry participants will be invited to develop specific use cases that demonstrate how a CBDC could be used to provide innovative and value-added payment and settlement services to households and businesses.”

RBA deputy governor Michelle Bullock described the project as “an important step” on the path to a potential Australian CBDC, saying on ABC Radio’s The World Today program it was effectively “an experiment”.

CBDC is no longer a question of technological feasibility. The key research questions now are what economic benefits a CBDC could enable, and how it could be designed to maximise those benefits.

Andreas Furche, chief executive, DFCRC

The RBA indicated that part of the motivation for the experiment was that it didn’t want to be left behind. A report is expected in around a year’s time and according to Bullock, an Australian CBDC is not necessarily a certainty.

RBA ‘Jawboning’ on Stablecoins v CBDCs

This all comes as just three weeks ago, RBA chief Philip Lowe indicated that private stablecoins were “probably better than CBDCs“. Then again, the RBA also forecast inflation to be 1.5 percent this year, which has since risen to 6.1 percent, a 21-year high. Macro policy commentators would describe this as “jawboning”, and would suggest watching what the RBA does, and not what it says.

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Australia CBDCs Crypto News Cryptocurrency Law Regulation Stablecoins

Reserve Bank of Australia Chief: Private Stablecoins May Be Better Than CBDCs

In a recent panel discussion of the G20 finance officials meeting in Indonesia, Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) governor Philip Lowe signalled his support for privately issued stablecoins, subject to appropriate consumer protection guardrails.

Private Sector Better Suited to Issuing Digital Dollars?

Just weeks after Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers said that crypto would remain excluded from foreign currency tax arrangements, RBA head Lowe has said that privately issued stablecoins may be better than central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), provided the relevant companies are suitably regulated.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers (left) and RBA governor Philip Lowe (centre) represent Australia at the the 2022 G20 finance officials meeting. Source: The West Australian

In a panel discussion that included the inherent risks of decentralised finance (DeFi) projects, talk shifted to CBDCs and their potential application in both a retail or wholesale context.

With the recent implosion of “stablecoin” UST and Luna, regulation has come into sharp focus, an issue that no doubt partially informed the RBA chief’s comments on privately issued stablecoins:

If these tokens are going to used widely by the community they are going to need to be backed by the state, or regulated just as we regulate bank deposits.

Philip Lowe, RBA governor

Lowe added: “I tend to think that the private solution is going to be better – if we can get the regulatory arrangements right – because the private sector is better than the central bank at innovating and designing features for these tokens”.

As crypto regulation is one of the newly elected federal government’s stated priorities, those who oppose retail CBDCs on the basis of financial surveillance and infringements on freedom will be pleased to hear that the RBA governor is seemingly more inclined towards a free-market solution. However, that in itself provides no guarantee, as Tether (USDT) and Circle (USDC) have both been accused of censorship in the past.

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CBDCs Crypto News

Sri Lanka Reiterates Crypto Warning as President Flees Amid Civil Uprising

Sri Lanka is in the throes of mass protests over an economic crisis that this week saw its President, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, flee the country on a military jet.

Simultaneously,  the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) has warned the public against crypto purchases due to the industry’s regulation drought.

The CBSL issued a short media release to remind the public that, amid the country’s economic collapse, virtual currencies (VCs) remain “largely unregulated digital representations of value that are issued by private entities and can be electronically traded”.

Inflation Hits 54%, Interest Rates 15.5%

With Sri Lanka’s inflation level topping 54 percent last month, the CBSL raised interest rates to 15.5 percent with an immense knock-on effect on the cost of living for the country’s 22 million population.

[Digital currencies] are considered unregulated financial instruments and have no regulatory oversight or safeguards relating to their usage in Sri Lanka … The public is therefore warned of the possible exposure to significant financial, operational, legal and security-related risks as well as customer protection concerns posed to the users by investments in VCs.

Central Bank of Sri Lanka

On July 9, hundreds of protesters breached the president’s Colombo residence, reportedly seizing 17.8 million rupees (approximately US$50,000) in cash and fully utilising all facilities in the residence.

As the situation in Sri Lanka continues to spiral, CBSL’s media release also warned the public to be wary of various VC schemes and scams offered through all forms of media.

Crypto Opposition Around the Globe

Several other nations around the world also remain anti-crypto, notably Russia and Zambia. The Central Bank of the Russian Federation (CBR) was seeking to ban crypto investments in late 2021, according to a report by Reuters. The CBR also barred mutual funds from investing in digital currency during this same period.

More recently, Zambia’s central bank was revealed to be in the process of researching central bank digital currencies, with aspirations to implement a CBDC by the end of the fourth quarter. This followed government-issued warnings about crypto earlier in the year. Despite wanting to explore CBDCs, the Zambian government maintains an anti-crypto stance.

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CBDCs Crypto News Ripple Stablecoins

Ripple Pushes for Dominance on XRP Ledger, Launches ‘Innovation Challenge’

Ripple, the company behind the cryptocurrency XRP and the XRP Ledger (XRPL), has launched an innovation challenge to encourage the development of XRPL apps for central bank digital currencies (CBDCs). 

Entrants will need to either build a new solution or update an existing solution that uses CBDC tech and can be run on the XRP Ledger. 

Submissions for the challenge will be accepted from June 27 until August 25, with the winners announced on September 8 set to share in US$47,000 in prizes.

Winners of the challenge will then be invited to the Ripple CBDC Innovate Winners Only Event, which has a prize pool of US$150,000.

Challenge to Cover Three Categories

The innovation challenge will accept entries in three categories each with their own separate judging criteria: interoperability, retail-facing, and financial inclusion:

  • The interoperability category encourages entrants to build a solution that enables an XRPL-based CBDC to bridge with other digital assets, such as other CBDCs, NFTs and stablecoins.
  • The retail-facing category requires entrants to build an interface to work with a CBDC in a “hip and fashionable way”, which is accessible enough for any human to interact with.
  • The financial inclusion category instructs entrants to build a solution that can “leverage the benefits of a CBDC” to bring banking services to underserved populations.

Ripple Looking to Secure Dominant CBDC Position

Ripple has been known primarily for its cross-border payment solutions and on-demand liquidity, but recently it has also been making a push into the CBDC space. In addition to this CBDC-focused innovation challenge, last year the government of the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan enlisted Ripple to pilot a CBDC running on the XRPL, and the Pacific island nation of Palau also partnered with Ripple to create an XRPL-based government-backed stablecoin.

In related news, earlier this year Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen joined forces with Greenpeace in a US$5 million campaign to encourage Bitcoin to abandon its proof-of-work consensus mechanism and transition to a more energy-efficient system such as proof-of-stake.

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CBDCs Crypto News Europe

European Central Bank Claims Fixed Supply for its CBDC: 1.5 Trillion Euros

The European Central Bank’s executive board member Fabio Panetta has announced that the ECB will limit the digital euro to a maximum supply of 1.5 trillion euros.

Panetta appeared before the European Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs to report on the development of a digital euro as the program reaches the one-year mark:

Eurozone Set to Launch CBDC in Four Years

Since the eurozone’s central bank initiated a two-year investigation into a possible digital currency in July 2021, Panetta has said he was optimistic that a central bank digital currency (CBDC) would be ready for launch within four years. Panetta told the committee that should a digital euro be issued, it would be capped at 1.5 trillion euros as a major concern with a CBDC is that consumers might keep all their money in digital format, which would in effect mean depositing their entire savings with the central bank and starving consumer banks of the funds they need to lend to businesses and individuals.

Panetta said in a statement: “Keeping total digital euro holdings between one trillion and one-and-a-half trillion euro would avoid negative effects for the financial system and monetary policy.” He added: “As the population of the euro area is currently around 340 million, this would allow for holdings of around 3,000 to 4,000 digital euro per capita.”

Panetta continued by saying that many Europeans are “not enthusiastic, to put it mildly, about the digital euro”. This, he said, was partly due to the fact that very few people understand what a digital euro is because “it’s complicated”.

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Banking CBDCs Economics Payments

90% of Central Banks are Exploring CBDCs: BIS Report

A survey by the Bank For International Settlements (BIS) has found that nine out of 10 of the central banks surveyed are exploring central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), and over 50 percent are actively developing CBDCs or running concrete experiments.

The survey found more central banks were working on retail CBDCs, which are designed for domestic consumer use, compared to wholesale CBDCs, which are designed for institutional uses such as cross-border payments between banks:

Central Bank Interest in CBDCs Increasing Globally

The report, released on May 6 by the BIS Monetary and Economic division, detailed the results of the survey conducted in October-December 2021 which involved 81 central banks, representing 76 percent of the world’s population, including 25 advanced economies.

Key findings include:

  • 90 percent of central banks are exploring CDBCs;
  • 26 percent are currently running CDBC pilots; and
  • more than 60 percent are conducting proof-of-concept work.

The survey also also found the percentage of central banks exploring CDBCs is up from the 2020 figure of 83 percent. BIS suggests that this increase was driven partially by the Covid-19 pandemic and the emergence of stablecoins, particularly in advanced economies. 

Retail CBDCs a Priority 

In many countries, work on retail CBDCs is more advanced than on wholesale CBDCs, with the report finding that:

Globally, more than two-thirds of central banks consider that they are likely to or might possibly issue a retail CBDC in either the short or medium term.

2021 BIS survey on CBDCs

That’s not to suggest there’s no enthusiasm for wholesale CBDCs, however, with the report finding that cross-border transfer times and complexity are key drivers of wholesale CBDC development:

“Work on wholesale CBDCs is increasingly driven by reasons related to cross-border payments efficiency,” the survey found. “Central banks consider CBDCs capable of alleviating key pain points such as the limited operating hours of current payment systems and the length of current transaction chains.”

In Australia, CBDC exploration is well and truly under way, with the central bank having last September launched Project Dunbar, a multi-CBDC project run in partnership with the central banks of Singapore, Malaysia and South Africa and the BIS. The results of Project Dunbar found that while multi-CBDCs are technically viable, there are significant regulatory and jurisdictional hurdles to overcome.

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CBDCs Crypto News Cryptocurrencies Regulation

Bahamas to Allow Citizens to Pay Taxes with Digital Assets

Citizens of the Bahamas will be able to pay their taxes using cryptocurrency, as per this week’s release of a white paper from the Bahamian government.

Bahamian Government Pushing Broader Crypto Adoption

The government will allow Bahamians to pay taxes by collaborating with the nation’s central bank as well as the private sector. It will also encourage broader adoption of the nation’s CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency) and access to crypto through the Bahamian Dollar.

The government will endeavour to ensure that digital assets are not used for the evasion of taxes or sanctions, and will seek to ensure compliance with all applicable tax information exchange agreements (TIEA) and domestic laws and agreed OECD standards.

Bahamian government white paper

The white paper outlines the island nation’s strategy to become a “leading digital assets hub in the Caribbean” from now until 2026, according to Bahamian Prime Minister Philip Davis. As part of the plan, the government will establish a digital asset policy committee and a digital advisory panel, with the latter chaired by Davis:

Caribbean Crypto Paradise

The Bahamas was one of the first to implement proper regulations for the digital assets landscape. In 2020, the government created the Digital Assets and Registered Exchanges Act (DARE), allowing crypto companies to operate legally within the nation.

Some of the policy objectives outlined in the white paper are seeking to improve the attractiveness of the Bahamas as a well-regulated jurisdiction and to explore new opportunities in the digital assets landscape.

A few months ago, Crypto News Australia reported that the Tourism Authority of Thailand (TAT) was looking to attract crypto millionaires to revive visitor numbers to an industry adversely affected by the pandemic.

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Australia CBDCs Crypto News Investing Regulation Trading

Australia and Singapore Create New FinTech Bridge to Grow Digital Finance

The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and the Australian Treasury have come together to sign the Australia-Singapore FinTech Bridge Agreement, which an MAS media release describes as a measure to strengthen cooperation between both countries’ FinTech ecosystems:

Building a FinTech Bridge

The agreement will see two industry regulators facilitating trade and investment in their respective sectors. These regulators will also develop ties among industry groups, policy officials and other regulators, with further plans to develop FinTech companies in each other’s markets to create new opportunities and minimise entry barriers.

https://www.lawyersweekly.com.au/biglaw/24799-investment-groups-in-singapore-and-australia-acquire-figtree-grove-shopping-centre
MAS and the Australian Treasury have flagged a FinTech agreement.

The Bridge Agreement is likely to explore joint innovation projects in other emerging areas including blockchain, sustainable finance, data portability, and cross-border data connectivity. However, the first step for the partnership is to develop a framework for bilateral collaboration and joint projects.

Australian CBDC Partnerships

The agreement comes less than a month after the central banks of Australia, Malaysia, South Africa, Singapore, and the Bank for International settlements (BIS) announced plans to explore multi-CBDC platforms.

On March 25, BIS released a report announcing the results of two multi-CBDC platforms it had been working on, finding that while these platforms were technically viable, they faced governance, coordination, and jurisdictional challenges. Opportunities are available, although more exploration into the application of these platforms is required.

To learn more about CBDCs, Crypto News Australia has put together a guide on CBDCs and stablecoins.

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Banking CBDCs Crypto News

80% of Central Banks Are Considering Launching a CBDC

At least 80 percent of the world’s banks are considering launching a central bank digital currency (CBDC), according to a report from accounting firm PwC conducted in accordance with the firm’s annual index of CBDCs and stablecoins.

The index evaluates the current stage of CBDC projects in each country and the level of maturity of their respective central banks in developing a national digital currency.

The report, led by PwC’s blockchain specialist Haydn Jones, also taps into the role of stablecoins, calling them an “emerging complement to existing payment ecosystems”.

Other analysts have added that one important factor for stablecoins is transparency as the asset class continues to grow.

The role of the stablecoin in the crypto markets has and will continue to evolve as adoption of crypto increases, forcing a more prominent role of stablecoins across the larger financial ecosystem. Regulation will only strengthen the importance and give credence to the role that stablecoins will play.

PwC report

Retail CBDCs Have a Higher Level of Maturity

Retail CBDC projects refer to digital currencies designed for public use, whereas wholesale CBDCs are used by financial institutions with accounts on central banks.

Thailand and Hong Kong were leading the wholesale category for their joint partnership to launch mBridge – a multi-country CBDC project that seeks to create a common platform to enhance cross-border payments.

Overall, retail CBDC projects [digital currencies designed for public use] have reached greater maturity levels than wholesale projects, but the past year has seen progress on a number of successful wholesale pilots.

PwC report

Another example of wholesale CBDCs is the combined efforts of the central banks of Australia, Singapore, Malaysia and South Africa to launch Project Dunbar, which seeks to create two multi-CBDC platforms shared by multiple central banks to transact with each other using different digital currencies.

Retail CBDCs, however, have a far higher level of maturity compared to their counterparts, the report noted. For example, in October last year Nigeria became the first African country to launch its own retail CBDC, the eNaira, which received a score of 95 out of 100, making it the most developed project across both categories.

The Bahamas, Jamaica and China Taking the Lead

Other countries with a high level of maturity include The Bahamas, the first country to launch a retail CBDC, the Sand Dollar. Thailand and Jamaica are also testing their CBDC projects, which were announced last year.

China was the first major economy to test a CBDC pilot, in 2020, and it is now fully running in 12 cities as of March 2022. What’s interesting is that China is also rolling out its own state-backed blockchain, BSN, which will support the creation of China’s own version of Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs).