In the financial realm, old certainties are also beginning to falter. Digital technologies, changing payment habits and the race for payments supremacy are testing the complementarity of public and private money, which has long formed a cornerstone of our monetary system.
It is a pleasure to be here with all of you today to talk about the digital euro.
When
we launched this project, we made it clear that this is a common
European enterprise. Our collective effort is key to the preparation and
eventual success of a digital euro.
I would like to take this
opportunity to thank Commissioner McGuinness and the President of the
Eurogroup, Mr Donohoe, for the excellent collaboration.
As we
prepare to potentially issue a digital euro, we want to engage with and
listen to stakeholders and society at large. So I would like to thank
the National College of Ireland for hosting us today and giving us the
opportunity to discuss this project with you.
And I look forward
to talking to the students who are here today. Young people will play a
key role in the adoption of a digital euro and we need to hear their
perspectives to make it a success.
We live in turbulent times. As
we face the most serious geopolitical crisis since the Cold War, old
certainties are increasingly being challenged. The invasion of Ukraine
has cast further doubt on the reliability of a global order that enabled
unprecedented economic interdependence.
In the financial realm,
old certainties are also beginning to falter. Digital technologies,
changing payment habits and the race for payments supremacy are testing
the complementarity of public and private money, which has long formed a
cornerstone of our monetary system.
Today I will argue that to
preserve this symbiosis, public money must keep its role as a monetary
anchor in the digital era. A digital euro would fortify our monetary
sovereignty and provide a form of central bank money for making daily
digital payments across the euro area, just like cash for physical
transactions. To succeed, a digital euro will need to add value for
users, foster innovation, and enjoy strong political and societal
support.
Preserving the role of public money
Our monetary
system is based on the complementarity of public and private money.
Central banks provide a trusted and stable monetary base on which
intermediaries such as banks build new payment and financial services.
This coexistence has been a powerful driver of stability and innovation.
But
digital disruption and the declining use of cash – the only form of
sovereign money currently available to the public – are threatening to
upend this balance. Consumers are increasingly turning towards non-cash
payments. Only 20% of the cash stock is now used for payments, down from
35% fifteen years ago.
We will ensure that cash remains
available. But if the current trend continues, we could face a future in
which cash loses its central role and its ability to provide an
effective anchor as consumers turn to digital means of payment.
We cannot allow public money to become marginalised, for two good reasons.
First,
just a few global players have come to dominate certain segments of the
payments market, such as card payments and e-commerce. This trend could
be accentuated by the expansion of big techs, which can offer payment
services leveraging their large consumer base and dominant position in
related markets. This could result in an uneven playing field that harms
competition and raises data privacy concerns. And by creating further
dependencies on non-European providers, it could increase risks to
Europe’s strategic autonomy and threaten monetary sovereignty if central
bank money is no longer at the heart of the payment system.
Second, even digital payments will ultimately depend on the anchoring role of public money to function smoothly.
Confidence
that “one euro is one euro” whatever form it takes rests on our ability
to convert, at par, private money – such as funds held in bank deposits
or digital wallets – into public money, which is the safest form of
money available.
This
possibility of conversion reinforces confidence in the various forms of
private money used for euro payments, ensuring the smooth functioning
of the payment system.
Recent
developments in the market for crypto-assets illustrate that it is an
illusion to believe that private instruments can act as money when they
cannot be converted at par into public money at all times.
Despite
claims that cryptos are a trustworthy form of “currency” free from
public control, they are too risky to act as a reliable means of
payment. They behave more like speculative assets and raise multiple
public policy and financial stability concerns. Anyone investing in cryptos must be prepared to lose all their investment.
To
mitigate these risks, so-called stablecoins have emerged and have the
potential to become globally systemic, especially if issued by big
techs. But while the value of stablecoins is linked to what their
issuers describe as “reserve assets” and adequate regulation and
oversight could reduce risks, stablecoins are not risk-free.
There is no guarantee that they can be redeemed at par at any time –
just last week the world’s biggest stablecoin temporarily lost its peg
to the dollar. And stablecoins do not benefit from deposit insurance,
nor do they have access to central bank standing facilities. They are
therefore vulnerable to runs, as we have just seen with the crash of another stablecoin – TerraUSD.
The benefits of a digital euro
The
increasing popularity of non-cash payments and the expansion of
crypto-assets reveal a growing demand for immediacy and digitalisation.
If the “official sector” – central banks and supervised intermediaries –
does not satisfy this demand, others will.
For this reason, countries around the world are currently exploring the issuance of a central bank digital currency.
Nine countries have now fully launched a digital currency and some
large economies are quite advanced in their exploration, like China.
Digital
money issued by the central bank would offer the possibility for
everyone to use public money for digital payments. It would be a sound,
reliable means of payment designed in the public interest. And it would
preserve the coexistence of sovereign and private money that has served
us well so far.
In Europe, issuing a digital euro would also
allow us to protect our strategic autonomy while remaining open in a
world where technology and dependencies are increasingly being
weaponised....
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