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Fed Takes Key Step in Deciding on U.S. Digital-Coin Issuance

Fed Takes Key Step Forward in Deciding on Digital-Coin Issuance

The Federal Reserve took a key step in weighing the creation of its own digital currency, a move it said could help ensure the U.S. dollar’s dominance as the central bank grapples with fast-growing private cryptocurrencies and coins issued by other nations.

The central bank made no firm conclusions on whether issuing such a currency was prudent and in any case said it doesn’t intend to proceed without support from the White House and Congress -- so it’s not likely a U.S. digital dollar will be issued anytime soon. But the 35-page discussion paper issued Thursday on a government-backed coin, known as a central bank digital currency or CBDC, marks the Fed’s most significant action yet as it seeks to dive deeper into digital assets. 

“The introduction of a CBDC would represent a highly significant innovation in American money,” the Fed said in the paper.

The Fed, which will take public input until May 20, said it preferred that lawmakers pass legislation to authorize the currency. The central bank outlined a series of potential benefits from a U.S.-backed coin, including ensuring the dollar remains the preeminent currency in the international financial system. The central bank also said a CBDC could improve cross-border payments, increase financial inclusion and ease the dollar’s use in new technology. 

However, the central bank also warned of possible negative effects, including draining deposits from traditional banking and making runs on financial firms more likely or more severe. Another concern has been privacy, since the government could have a direct view into individual citizens’ transactions. The report offered few details on how that could be resolved, saying the Fed “would need to strike an appropriate balance between safeguarding consumer privacy rights and affording the transparency necessary to deter criminal activity.”

Also, the infrastructure of this new system could be a tempting target for hackers. So, shielding a Fed CBDC could be “particularly difficult,” the report said because it would “have more entry points than existing payment services.”

A Fed official said on a call with reporters that the central bank will assess next steps after the comment deadline, but didn’t offer a timeline for when a digital dollar could ultimately be implemented.

The central bank indicated that it would rely on private sector intermediaries, which could be traditional lenders or non-banks, to offer accounts and facilitate CBDC payments, rather than taking on that role itself. 

The paper is the result of a strong pivot toward deeper engagement on digital payment systems by Chair Jerome Powell in May. A separate paper on the technology that could run a central bank digital currency is expected from the Boston Fed as early as February. 

The paper comes as central banks around the world, most notably the People’s Bank of China, move ahead with their own digital currencies. 

China this year has ramped up a pilot of a digital yuan and is expected to trumpet its use at the Beijing Winter Olympics in February. Some experts say China and other early adopters of digital currencies could set standards for other countries, in part because different countries’ digital currency systems would eventually need to coordinate for cross-border payments. 

That could make the Fed’s research important even if a U.S. digital dollar didn’t launch for years, since many countries would seek to tailor their own systems to integrate with the U.S.

In the absence of a Fed-issued digital dollar, private companies have launched their own version in the form of stablecoins that hold reserves meant to ensure the coins can be exchanged for fiat currency on a one-for-one basis. 

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.