Experts from Germany’s five national banking associations draw up an ecosystem of innovative forms of money that extends far beyond the idea of digitalised central bank money, which is referred to as Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC).
ECB needs to think beyond digital cash
In a policy paper, the German Banking Industry Committee (GBIC) for
the first time sets out detailed thoughts on the design of a “digital
euro”. In this paper, experts from Germany’s five national banking
associations draw up an ecosystem of innovative forms of money that
extends far beyond the idea of digitalised central bank money, which is
referred to as Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC). The ECB will
probably launch the project for a digital euro in mid-July 2021.
“To be successful, the digital euro must do three things: It must be
as easy for consumers to handle as cash. It must be viable in the long
term for business enterprises, e.g. for automated machine-to-machine
payments. And the digital euro must be well embedded in our delicately
balanced, carefully secured and highly regulated European financial
system because this system guarantees safe and fair access to financial
and banking services for everyone in Europe”, notes Dr Joachim Schmalzl,
executive member of the Board of Management of the German Savings Bank
Association (DSGV), which is currently the lead coordinator for the
German Banking Industry Committee.
In the opinion of the experts from Germany’s five national banking
associations, issuing money should remain the responsibility of credit
institutions in the proven two-tier banking system, even if the digital
euro becomes legal tender like cash. For this reason, the ecosystem of
digital money which they propose is made up of three key elements:
- retail CBDC for private use
- wholesale CBDC for commercial and savings banks
- tokenised commercial bank money for use in industry
Retail CBDC issued by the central bank is to be used
by private individuals in the euro area in the same way as cash for
everyday payments, e.g. to retailers or government agencies. It should
be possible to use the digital euro like cash, anonymously and offline.
For this purpose, credit institutions will provide consumers in Europe
with “CBDC wallets”, i.e. electronic wallets.
Wholesale CBDC issued by the central bank is to be
used for the capital markets and interbank transfers. The GBIC’s experts
are calling for this special form of the digital euro partly because,
by adopting this approach, the ECB would be able to include further
digitalisation of central bank accounts in its project. The ultimate aim
is to achieve improvements which can benefit consumers, enterprises and
also the banking sector.
Tokenised commercial bank money, which will be made
available by commercial and savings banks, is to complement the two
forms of digital central bank money, in particular to meet corporate
demand arising from Industry 4.0 and the Internet of Things. Tokenised
commercial bank money could facilitate transactions based on “smart” –
i.e. automated – contracts and thus increase process efficiency.
“Increasing process digitalisation and automation will provide
completely new opportunities for Europe’s enterprises. The banking
sector is ready to provide new solutions for its corporate customers by
issuing innovative forms of money. The ECB must define the necessary
framework that will enable Europe’s banking sector and real economy to
make reasonable use of the new opportunities”, Joachim Schmalzl observed
on behalf of the GBIC.
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