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Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Saturday, October 02 2021 - 00:53
AsiaNet
CBDCs are Designed to be Very Stable; Majority of Central Banks Exploring CBDCs: IMF
NEW DELHI and MUMBAI, India, October 1, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

    "About 80-100 Central Banks around the world, including G20 nations, are 
exploring the Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) and are in some sort of 
pilot or testing stages," Tobias Adrian, Financial Counsellor and Director 
Monetary and Capital Markets Department, International Monetary Fund said at 
the Global FinTech Fest. The three-day Fest, which concluded on 30 September, 
was attended by over 26,000 delegates from 121 countries. Policymakers, 
technocrats, investors, founders, economists, bankers, participated in the 
Fest. The event was organised by National Payments Council of India (NPCI 
[https://www.npci.org.in/]) and Fintech Convergence Councill (FCC 
[https://www.fintechcouncil.in/]) and Payments Council of India 
(PCI[http://paymentscouncil.in/about-us.aspx]) of Internet and Mobile 
Association of India (IAMAI [https://www.iamai.in/]).

   "CBDCs are designed to be very stable, stable in value, low transaction cost 
and backed by the Central Bank for added consumer confidence, very different 
from bitcoins which fluctuate in value and are more like an investment asset," 
Tobias Adrian said.

Central Banks around the world are rushing in to think about CBDCs as it is 
very appealing for Central Banks to go along with technological progress. Also, 
there could be a lot of innovations in Central Banks issued digital currencies, 
especially across payments, lending platforms.

   "CBDCs could indeed be somewhat similar, not necessarily be, to bitcoin 
assets, could be based on blockchain technology, could be available in wallets. 
It depends on the design whether it is based on existing payment systems or 
using very powerful blockchain technologies," Tobias Adrian mentioned.

   Meanwhile, he warned that cybersecurity could be a major challenge for 
CBDCs. "You need to make sure that the system is resilient against 
cyberattacks." It's not the technology alone but the intersection of technology 
and human. Secondly, CBDCs might undermine existing banks so banks need to 
upgrade their technologies to compete. Finally, cellphones, not all today have 
cellphones for transacting CBDCs.

   On expensive cross-border payments, Adrian envisioned that cross-border 
transfers would be a lot cheaper for small amount of payments. There are some 
wallet exchanges available that allow one to convert US dollar into rupee 
stable coin, with an implicit fee that is cheaper. However, there are a lot of 
discussions going on between Central Banks of various countries to make the 
cross-border payments cheaper.

   Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1629838/GFF_Logo.jpg 

   Source:  Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI)

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