The programmable euro is an important innovation to secure Europe’s long-term competitiveness in the global economy. Europe needs to act swiftly and decisively since Asian and US initiatives such as the digital Renminbi or Libra threaten to pre-empt European projects.
A programmable euro needs to take
account of the different requirements that a payment system in an
advanced economy has to meet. These requirements are defined by the
differing needs of individual user groups. For the vast majority of
payment transactions, private-sector solutions – especially those
provided by the banking industry – should be able to satisfy these needs
of the users. Nevertheless, a European currency area that can be
competitive and sovereign in the long term also requires CBDC in the
form of a programmable euro issued by the ECB.
Introduction
The announcement by the Libra
Association in June 2019 that it would issue a private cryptocurrency
with a global reach in the foreseeable future provided an important
impetus to the discussion about the future of payments. During the
months that followed, the Libra Association accepted the criticism of
its plan and completely revised it within nine months. With the “new”
Libra white paper, published on 16 April 2020, the probability of the
Libra Association starting to issue a programmable euro, dollar, pound
sterling and other currencies has increased fundamentally.
But the Libra project is not the only
one of its kind. Numerous parallel initiatives surrounding the issue of
“digital currency” can be observed around the world. A few weeks ago,
the Chinese central bank launched a pilot project for a digital renminbi
in several Chinese metropolises. Simultaneously, countries such as
Sweden, Great Britain, Canada and South Korea are working intensively on
the introduction of a central bank digital currency (CBDC). And German
Finance Minister Olaf Scholz is backing “innovative European responses”
to projects such as Libra. The innovative aspects of all these
initiatives essentially focus on two elements: first, stablecoins2
are to be created and used as new additional private-sector forms of
money. Second, money is to be given a previously unknown quality: it is
to become programmable. Programmable means that digital means of payment
are combined with smart contracts. The latter allow the money to be
integrated into digitalised value-added processes, enabling money to be
clearly allocated to individual process steps, where payment can be
fully automated.
The discussion following the publication
of the first Libra white paper revealed that there are a number of
issues surrounding the nature of this new form of money, the future
demand and the question of the issuer. To clarify the issues involved, a
distinction needs to be made between the following three levels.
- At the level of individual “economic
entities”, the question is what needs they have and what contribution
digital money can make to satisfy these needs.
- The macroeconomic level and thus the
question of precisely what form of money a stablecoin actually
represents is probably the central aspect. Closely related to this are
questions about the effects on the stability of the system, including
the stability of the banking sector, and on the economic policy
sovereignty of states and the scope for monetary policy control.
- At the technological level, answers
must be provided to questions concerning issues such as volumes,
scalability and interoperability.
Differing needs with respect to means of payment require different programmable euro solutions
A prerequisite for the successful
implementation of a future payments strategy is an accurate forecast of
the future needs of different user groups. It is difficult to make such a
forecast because of the problem of reliably predicting the development
of a new technology and its impact on households, businesses, banks and
the stability of the financial system. In the complex economies of
industrialised countries, moreover, there are no uniform expectations of
what a payment system is supposed to be capable of. The needs of
different user groups are simply not identical.
- Households are primarily interested in
the functionality of money. They do not, as a rule, distinguish between
the issuers of different forms of money, i.e. between central bank and
bank money. Households are interested above all in the availability,
usability, reliability and security of the means of payment; there is no
special focus on central bank money.
- Businesses differentiate a bit more. For them, it is possible to identify a need for crypto-based forms of money on two levels.
- First, there is the increasing demand
for programmable money. The background: DLT will make an increasing
contribution to solving technical and economic problems in the coming
years. There are already a large number of pilot projects in areas such
as securities or logistics. In future, however, increasing emphasis will
be placed on applications in the area of “digital transformation” in
the form of the Internet of Things (IoT), for example. If DLT is to
effectively develop its potential here, a means of payment on the same
technological basis will be needed – and that means the programmable
euro.
- In contrast to households, businesses
normally have large bank deposits to manage, so CBDC is likely to
represent an interesting alternative since deposits in CBDC would tend
to offer them greater security than bank deposits.
- The interest of the state is primarily
to guarantee households and businesses a secure and stable currency and,
based on this, an efficient payment system. It will only embrace
technological innovations if they are necessary to safeguard the
security of the currency, the stability of the monetary order and
competitiveness....
Full paper SUERF Policy Note, Issue No 182 (0.75 MB)">SUERF Policy Note, Issue No 182" class="ikonica" width="20" height="20">SUERF Policy Note, Issue No 182 (0.75 MB)
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