Fed's Brainard: Can't wrap head around not having U.S. central bank
digital currency
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[July 31, 2021] By
Ann Saphir
(Reuters) - Federal Reserve Governor Lael
Brainard on Friday laid out a range of reasons for "urgency" around the
issue of developing a U.S. central bank digital currency, including the
fact that other countries such as China are moving ahead with their own.
"The dollar is very dominant in international payments, and if you have
the other major jurisdictions in the world with a digital currency, a
CBDC (central bank digital currency)offering, and the U.S. doesn't have
one, I just, I can't wrap my head around that," Brainard told the Aspen
Institute Economic Strategy Group. "That just doesn't sound like a
sustainable future to me."
Fed officials are taking a deep dive into the digital payments universe,
collecting public feedback on the potential costs and benefits as well
as design considerations with a view to publishing a discussion paper in
early September.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell in comments earlier this month described the
analysis as a key step in accelerating the Fed's efforts to determine if
it should issue its own CDBC.
"One of the most compelling use cases is in the international realm,
where intermediation chains are opaque and long and costly," Brainard
said on Friday.
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Federal Reserve Board Governor Lael Brainard speaks at the John F.
Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, U.S., March 1, 2017. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
But there are domestic reasons too for a U.S.-backed digital currency, she said:
the dramatic rise in stablecoins, a form of cryptocurrency pegged to a
conventional currency such as the U.S. dollar but not backed by any government.
Stablecoins could proliferate and fragment the payment system, or one or two
could emerge as dominant, she said. Either way, "in a world of stablecoins you
could imagine that households and businesses, if the migration away from
currency is really very intense, they would simply lose access to a safe
government backed settlement asset, which is of course what currency has always
provided."
A CBDC could also help solve other problems, she suggested, including the
difficulty during the pandemic of getting government payments to people without
bank accounts, who also tend to be the very people who need the payments the
most.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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