The payment system underpinning cross-border financial flows has not kept pace with rapid growth in global economic integration.
      
    
    
      The global 
network of correspondent banks that facilitates international payments 
is hindered by high costs, low speed and transparency, and operational 
complexities. Banks are also paring back their correspondent networks 
and services, leaving many participants (notably emerging market and 
developing economies) without sufficient or affordable access to the 
global financial system.
 
Multiple CBDC (multi-CBDC) arrangements that directly connect 
jurisdictional digital currencies in a single common technical 
infrastructure offer significant potential to improve the current system
 and allow cross-border payments to be immediate, cheap and universally 
accessible with secure settlement.
 
The BIS  Innovation Hub Hong Kong Centre, the Hong Kong Monetary 
Authority, the Bank of Thailand, the Digital Currency Institute of the 
People's Bank of China and the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates 
are working together to build such a multi-CBDC platform, known as 
mBridge.
 
A platform based on a new blockchain – the mBridge Ledger – was built
 by central banks to support real-time, peer-to-peer, cross-border 
payments and foreign exchange transactions using CBDCs. It also ensures 
compliance with jurisdiction-specific policy and legal requirements, 
regulations and governance needs. A pilot involving real corporate 
transactions centred around international trade was conducted on the 
platform among participating central banks, selected commercial banks 
and their customers in four jurisdictions.
  
  
mBridge demonstrates that it is realistic to aim for a tailored 
multi-CBDC platform solution to tackle the limitations of today's 
cross-border payment systems. Learning from earlier project phases and 
the pilot, the project will continue building the technology and testing
 it, while adding more liquidity, compliance and connectivity features, 
with a view to moving the platform closer to a production-ready system. 
The project's next phases are also expected to include additional use 
cases and participants, and further work on the legal and governance 
framework.
  
 
 Related publications
 
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