Carney sees big challenges as BoE eyes 'digital 
						banknotes'
						
		 
		Send a link to a friend  
 
		
		
		 [March 12, 2020]  By 
		David Milliken 
		 
		LONDON (Reuters) - The Bank of England must 
		tread carefully to avoid financial stability dangers if it creates a 
		digital equivalent to its existing banknotes, Governor Mark Carney said 
		on Thursday. 
		 
		Cash usage is falling in Britain, making shoppers and businesses more 
		reliant on electronic money held with banks and payment companies rather 
		than banknotes issued by the BoE. 
		 
		The BoE said it was seeking the public's views on how it might design a 
		digital currency of its own to operate alongside physical cash -- though 
		a decision on whether to go ahead would need government approval. 
		 
		"While CBDC (central bank digital currency) poses a number of 
		opportunities, it could raise significant challenges for maintaining 
		monetary and financial stability ... and would need to be very carefully 
		designed if it were to be introduced," Carney said in the foreword to a 
		BoE discussion paper. 
						
		
		  
						
		 
		 
		Cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin have failed to take off as a means of 
		payment in Britain, and the BoE has been critical of the lack of detail 
		behind Facebook's proposal for a so-called 'stablecoin' called Libra. 
		 
		The BoE's move was welcomed by think-tank Positive Money, which is 
		critical of commercial banks' lending policies. 
		 
		"The government and central bank must continue to work together to 
		accelerate efforts to issue a digital currency before they are beaten to 
		it by the likes of Facebook," Positive Money's head of policy David 
		Clarke said. 
		 
		The BoE said that if it introduced its own digital currency, it would be 
		denominated in sterling and would not replace banknotes or commercial 
		bank deposits, and need not be based on the blockchain technology that 
		underpins cryptocurrencies. 
						
		
            [to top of second column]  | 
            
             
            
			  
            
			Bank of England Governor Mark Carney is seen at the launch event for 
			the the new twenty pound note at the Turner Contemporary gallery in 
			Margate, Britain, October 10, 2019. Leon Neal/Pool via REUTERS 
            
			  
But, like cash, it would offer an alternative to using banks for payments 
between individuals and businesses and could make cross-border payments easier. 
One of the BoE's deputy governors, Jon Cunliffe, has warned that taken too far, 
a central bank digital currency could undermine commercial banks -- a concern 
echoed in the BoE paper. 
 
"If significant deposit balances are moved from commercial banks into CBDC, it 
could have implications for the balance sheets of commercial banks and ... the 
amount of credit provided by banks to the wider economy," the BoE said. 
 
"Nonetheless, CDBC can be designed in a way that would help mitigate these 
risks," it added. 
 
One option would be for the BoE to provide the underlying infrastructure for a 
digital currency -- sitting alongside its existing sterling payment systems -- 
but for private companies to be responsible for dealing with customers. 
 
The BoE consultation will run until June 12. 
 
(Reporting by David Milliken; Editing by Kate Holton and Catherine Evans) 
				 
			[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. 
			
			
			   |