Video address by Christine Lagarde, President of the ECB, to the “High level conference: Towards a legislative framework enabling a digital euro for citizens and businesses”
I’m very happy to be here with you via this video message and warmly
welcome you to this high-level conference on the digital euro. Having so
many decision-makers gathered here today shows the strong political
backing the digital euro project has gained at the European level.
Since
we kicked off the investigation phase a year ago, we have worked very
closely with you all, the European Commission, the European Parliament
and the euro area finance ministers. And we have also engaged closely
with market participants, including intermediaries, consumers and
retailers, to hear their views. This has allowed us to achieve steady
progress.
I sincerely thank you for this strong cooperation. And I
think that it shows that the digital euro is not a stand-alone project,
confined to the payment domain. It is rather a cross-policy and truly
European initiative that has the potential to affect society as a whole.
Maintaining
citizens' trust in money and payment services in the digital age is an
important objective in itself. But it is of even greater significance
for the European economy at large. After all, a trusted, efficient and
secure payment system is the basis for our economies to function
effectively.
For many decades, this basis has been provided by a
hybrid model for payments: central banks issue public money -
essentially cash for individuals and reserve accounts for banks. The
private sector relies on it to provide the bulk of total money - around
85% - in the form of commercial bank money. Key to this hybrid model is
that citizens can convert private for public money at par, which ensures
that all forms of money can be used indiscriminately for payments
throughout the economy.
Disruptive transformation
But this reliable model for payments is now undergoing a potentially disruptive transformation, led by three developments.
First,
people are increasingly paying digitally instead of using cash. Almost
half of euro area consumers say they prefer to pay with cashless means
of payments, such as cards. We will continue to provide cash, but if it
is used less and less for payments, public money could ultimately lose
its role as the monetary anchor for the hybrid model, threatening its
key function in securing trust in payments, with implications for the
economy. Payments are a public good that is simply too important to be
left to the market.
Second, in the absence of a public anchor, the
emergence of new kinds of digital assets could harbour instability and
confusion among citizens about what is money and what is not. Take for
example crypto assets, held or used by 16% of Americans and 10% of
Europeans in 2021. Their unbacked variants – such as Bitcoin or Ether –
are too volatile to act as a means of payment. And while stablecoins are
designed to be less volatile, and therefore more suitable for payments,
they are vulnerable to runs - and often not backed at all as we
witnessed earlier this year. This highlights the importance of the
European crypto-assets regulation (MiCA) that will protect consumers
against some of the risks associated with crypto assets.
Third,
the entry of big techs into payments could increase the risk of market
domination and dependence on foreign payment technologies, with
consequences for Europe’s strategic autonomy. Already now more than two
thirds of European card payment transaction are run by companies with
headquarters outside the European Union.
Designing digital public money
By
designing digital public money we can get ahead of these developments
and ensure that confidence in the monetary system is maintained and
innovation is nurtured.
Issuing a digital euro would indeed
safeguard people’s confidence that “one euro is one euro”, allowing them
to convert private digital money at par into digital central bank
money. It would ensure that money continues to be denominated in euros.
And It would be based on a European infrastructure, facilitating
intermediaries to scale payments innovation throughout the euro area and
thus strengthen Europe’s strategic autonomy.
Our work on
exploring the underlying rationale, potential benefits and risks and
core design principles of a digital euro has made good progress. It is
not a race, but as a matter of fact the euro area is at a relatively
advanced stage in exploring a central bank digital currency (CBDC).
But
to realise this vision, the focus of our work now shifts to the
concrete design and embedding the digital euro in a sound legal
framework. This is as an area where co-legislators have an even more
important role to play. I’m therefore very much looking forward to the
legislative proposal for establishing a digital euro which the European
Commission will propose shortly.
In particular, co-legislators
must define the balance between competing public objectives in the
policy areas that the Treaty assigned to them. Two aspects come to my
mind.
Privacy
The first one is privacy. In our public
consultation, 43% of respondents ranked privacy as the most important
aspect of the digital euro, well ahead of other features. So it is clear
that if we want the digital euro to be attractive, it needs to be
designed in a way that meets people's privacy expectations...
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