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Central Bank Digital Currency

Central banks around the world are studying central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) due to the rise of cryptocurrencies and lack of regulation. CBDCs would be a digital form of fiat currency issued and regulated by a country's central bank. They differ from cryptocurrencies in that they are issued by a central authority rather than decentralized networks, and their value is determined by monetary policy rather than market forces. Key design considerations for CBDCs include which users they target, their scope, underlying architecture, and technology.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
253 views14 pages

Central Bank Digital Currency

Central banks around the world are studying central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) due to the rise of cryptocurrencies and lack of regulation. CBDCs would be a digital form of fiat currency issued and regulated by a country's central bank. They differ from cryptocurrencies in that they are issued by a central authority rather than decentralized networks, and their value is determined by monetary policy rather than market forces. Key design considerations for CBDCs include which users they target, their scope, underlying architecture, and technology.

Uploaded by

Gerard Arabian
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Central Bank
Digital Currency
Overview

With the increasing rise in cryptocurrencies


And absence of regulation, government-backed
digital currencies has been closely studied and
gaining more attention.

With little or no e ff o r t attempting to regulate


elusive cryptocurrencies with no issuer or
Centre of operation, the need to study CBDCs
is driven by international organizations such
as the Bank for International Settlements, the
IMF and the World Bank.
What are CBDCs

• A digital form a fiat currency of a country


that is issued and regulated by the
competent monetary authority of the
country.

• They came into existence largely because of


threat of cryptocurrencies to present- day
banks that operate under the purview and
control of a country’s regulatory authority.

• They differ across four major design


parameter:

• Users
• Scope
• Architecture
• Technology
Features of CBDCs

The f eat ur es of a CBDC depend on t he object iv es pur sued


with the introduction of CBDCs:
Difference between
CBDCs and Cryptos

• Access and control to blockchain is limited to a


select group of approved participants vs
decentralized public ledger.

• Traditional money in digital form vs virtual


currency.

• Issued and governed by a country’s central bank


vs issuance by non-central authority.

• Potentially more universally accepted for


payments vs regulatory constraints preventing
payments with crypto.

• Value determined by monetary policy vs value of


crypto determined by market forces.

• CBDC issued on a permissioned/private


blockchain network vs public network in crypto.
Identifying Users and Needs

A broad range of potential users. Some projects include top tier intermediaries(TTIs)
only, some include all intermediaries (TTIs and non-TTI PSPs), while others seek to
include all wholesale or even all retail transactions.

Foundational design
considerations

Source: The Bank for International Settlements


Users Needs

• The consumer’s prime need is that the CBDC


embodies a cash-like claim on the central bank
transferable in peer-to-peer settings.

• consumers are unlikely to adopt a CBDC if


it is less convenient to use than today’s
electronic payments. Cash-like safety and
convenience of use lead to the foundational
design consideration for CBDC.

• Two further consumer needs are easy,


universal access and privacy by default.

• The final consumer need we consider is that


CBDCs should also enable cross- border
payments i.e allowing consumers to hold
foreign digital currencies directly
Scope

• The system may extend only to monetary


arrangements or to payment arrangements or it
may include elements of both
Potential CBDC Retail Structure

Source: The Bank for International Settlements


Technology

The infrastructure requirements differs substantially


across the three architectures. This could be based on
conventional centrally controlled database or on a novel
distributed ledger.
The difference between these two lies in how data are
updated:
• Conventional: resilience is typically achieved by
storing data over multiple physical nodes, which are
controlled by one authoritative entity – the top node
of a hierarchy. Could be used for the direct CBDC
• DLT-based: the Ledger is managed jointly by
different entities in a decentralised manner and
without a top node. Each update has to be
harmonised between the nodes of all entities. Could
be used for Indirect CBDC
Technology

Source: The Bank for International Settlements


Access Technology
The third layer of the pyramid looks at who should have access. The first
option which is conventional is to tie ownership to an identity. Second is for
the central bank to honour claims when the CBDC user demonstrates
knowledge of an encrypted value.(digital tokens)

Source: The Bank for International Settlements


References

https://www.ledgerinsights.com/imf-pros-cons-central-bank-digital-currency-cbdc/
EBI Working Paper Series Douglas W. Arner/Ross P. Buckley/ Dirk A. Zetzsche/
Anton N. Didenko After Libra, Digital Yuan and COVID-19: Central Bank Digital
Currencies and the New World of Money and Payment Systems 11/06/2020
BIS Quarterly Review, March 2020

Source: The Bank for International Settlements


Thank
FO R YO UR TIM

You
E

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