Bounded by the pandemic, central bank digital currency (CBDC) will roll out in the next couple of years, maturing a “game-changer,” industry insiders stated.
It’s the COVID-19 pandemic, which we have to thank for “greatly accelerat[ing] the push for digital currencies to replace traditional cash and cross border transaction systems,” stated Brian Gallagher, Head of Business Development at blockchain platform Partisia Blockchain.
In addition to the Chinese-state sponsored digital yuan; we’ve also seen discussions of a digital euro, digital dollar, digital yen, digital ruble, as well as a Saudi and UAE state-sponsored cryptocurrency for cross border trade between the two countries.
Gallagher stated that,
“These types of systems will roll out within the next 1-2 years. Before the pandemic, that timeline may have been closer to 3-5 years.”
The first version of CBDCs may start seeing the light this year, as claimed by the CEO of stablecoin platform Stablehouse, Philippe Bekhazi. He announced that “government-led CBDC initiatives will begin to materialize as we get further into 2021.”
Monica Singer, the South African Lead for major Ethereum-focused blockchain company Consensys, said it would be a “game-changer” when Central Banks introduce CBDCs.
Singer continued that she is “totally passionate” about utilizing this technology to include the unbanked – those who’ve never had the chance to have a bank account or to own any asset to increase their wealth – of which the estimate is 1.7 billion individuals.
“It is an amazing opportunity to give the unbanked the chance to benefit from financial products from not only currencies like stablecoins and CBDCs,” she reasoned, “but also tokenized assets that they will be able to acquire in real-time, as these tokens of real-world assets will be readily available and fractional ownership will become the norm.“
Moreover, with more considerable emphasis placed on digital payments among the general population, governments worldwide started to explore the use of CBDCs to reach the broader public amid lockdowns for stimulus plans, said Amrit Kumar, President, and Chief Scientific Officer at blockchain platform Zilliqa (ZIL).
For instance, there’s Project Helvetia – an experiment between the Bank for International Settlements Innovation Hub Swiss Centre, the Swiss National Bank (SNB), and the financial market infrastructure operator SIX – which already trialed the technological and legal feasibility of transferring digital assets. This is just “a recent example that reflects the promise of the large-scale use of digital assets,” Kumar stated, and continued,
Nevertheless, the Chinese digital yuan’s swift advancement stimulated the discussion and ‘production’ of CBDC’s globally.
Kumar cited that,
“2020 saw growing traction around the use of [CBDCs], with the launch of China’s digital yuan further prompting central banks across the globe to accelerate their digital currency initiatives.”
For example, he gave Singapore, which has been exploring the use of wholesale CBDCs, with the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) finding that the time may have come “to take this from experiment to production. The case for CBDCs is vital, particularly in a time of economic turbulence,” Kumar concluded.
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