Digital Dollar Project to launch five U.S. central bank digital currency
pilots
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[May 03, 2021]
By Michelle Price
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. nonprofit
Digital Dollar Project said on Monday it will launch five pilot programs
over the next 12 months to test the potential uses of a U.S. central
bank digital currency, the first effort of its kind in the United
States.
The private-sector pilots initially will be funded by Accenture Plc and
involve financial firms, retailers and NGOs, among others. The aim is to
generate data that could help U.S. policymakers develop a digital
dollar.
A partnership between Accenture and the Digital Dollar Foundation, the
Digital Dollar Project was created last year to promote research into a
U.S. central bank digital currency (CBDC).
"There are conferences and papers coming out every week around the world
on CBDCs based on data from other countries," said Christopher
Giancarlo, former chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and
co-founder of the Digital Dollar Foundation.
"What there is not, is any real data and testing from the United States
to inform that debate. We're seeking to generate that real-world data,"
Giancarlo added.
CBDCs are the digital equivalent of banknotes and coins, giving holders
a direct digital claim on the central bank and allowing them to make
instant electronic payments.
While debit cards or payment apps are a form of digital cash, those
transactions are created by commercial banks based on money central
banks credit to those banks' accounts. They are not fully
government-backed, can take days to settle, and often incur fees.
Cryptocurrencies, meanwhile, are controlled by private actors.
Central banks around the world, including in China and Europe, are
revving up CBDC projects to fend off threats from cryptocurrencies and
improve payment systems.
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J. Christopher Giancarlo Chairman, U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, speaks at the Milken Institute 21st
Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, U.S. April
30, 2018. REUTERS/Mike Blake
As guardian of the world's most widely used currency,
the U.S. Federal Reserve is moving more cautiously. It is working
with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to build a
technology platform for a hypothetical digital dollar, but chair
Jerome Powell said last week that it is "far more important" to get
a digital dollar right than it is to be fast.
Giancarlo said Powell was correct to be cautious but that as China
pushes ahead, the United States must drive a discussion on
incorporating U.S. values such as privacy and freedom of commerce
and speech into the development of CBDCs.
"It's vital that the U.S. asserts leadership as it has in previous
technological innovations," Giancarlo added.
A digital dollar could also boost financial inclusion in the United
States, where transaction fees impede the access of many Americans
to mainstream financial services, Giancarlo said.
The pilot programs, three of which will launch in the next two
months, will complement the Fed's MIT project by generating data on
the functional, sociological, business uses, benefits and other
facets, of a digital dollar. The data is due to be released
publicly.
Accenture has worked on a number of CBDC projects including in
Canada, Singapore and France.
David Treat, a senior managing director at Accenture, said CBDCs
would exist alongside other forms of physical and electronic money,
rather than replace them.
"It's not a panacea for all money," Treat said. "We will be using
physical cash and coin for some time."
(Reporting by Michelle Price; Editing by Will Dunham)
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