The
first phase of experiments, to be carried out until March 2022,
will focus on testing the technical feasibility of issuing,
distributing and redeeming a central bank digital currency (CBDC),
the BOJ said in a statement.
The BOJ will thereafter move to the second phase of experiments
that will scrutinise more detailed functions, such as whether to
set limits on the amount of CBDC each entity can hold.
If necessary, the central bank will launch a pilot programme
that involves payment service providers and end users, BOJ
Executive Director Shinichi Uchida said last month.
"While there is no change in the BOJ's stance it currently has
no plan to issue CBDC, we believe initiating experiments at this
stage is a necessary step," Uchida told a committee of
policymakers and bank lobbies looking into CBDC.
Global central banks are looking at developing digital
currencies to modernise their financial systems, ward off the
threat from cryptocurrencies and speed up domestic and
international payments.
While China leads the pack, the BOJ has been speeding up efforts
to catch up with a plan announced in October to begin
experimenting on how to operate its own digital currency.
(Reporting by Leika Kihara; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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