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New Delhi: The RBI is working on phased introduction of its own digital currency and is mulling pilot projects in wholesale and retail segments in the near future, Deputy Governor T Rabi Sankar said on Thursday. He also said several countries have implemented specific purpose Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) in the wholesale and retail segments.

A CBDC is a legal tender issued by a central bank in a digital form. It is the same as a fiat currency and is exchangeable one-to-one with the fiat currency.

Sankar said developing a domestic CBDC could provide the public with uses that any private virtual currency (VC) offers and to that extent might retain public preference for the rupee.

“It could also protect the public from the abnormal level of volatility some of these VCs experience,” he said while participating in an online discussion organised by The Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy.

Introduction of CBDC, he said, has the potential to provide significant benefits such as reduced dependency on cash, higher seigniorage due to lower transaction costs and reduced settlement risk.

“Introduction of CBDC would possibly lead to a more robust, efficient, trusted, regulated and legal tender-based payments option. There are associated risks, no doubt, but they need to be carefully evaluated against the potential benefits,” he said.

The Deputy Governor said it would be the RBI’s endeavour, “as we move forward in the direction of India’s CBDC”, to take the necessary steps which would reiterate the leadership position of the country in payment systems.

He said CBDCs are likely to be in the arsenal of every central bank going forward. Setting this up will require careful calibration and a nuanced approach in implementation.

Sankar stressed that drawing board considerations and stakeholder deliberations are important, while technological challenges have to be looked at as well.

“RBI is currently working towards a phased implementation strategy and examining use cases which could be implemented with little or no disruption,” he said.

Some key issues under RBI’s examination include, the scope of CBDCs, the underlying technology, the validation mechanism and distribution architecture.

“However, conducting pilots in wholesale and retail segments may be a possibility in near future,” the Deputy Governor said.

Sankar further said legal changes would be necessary as the current provisions have been made keeping in mind currency in a physical form under the Reserve Bank of India Act.

He said consequential amendments would also be required in the Coinage Act, Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) and Information Technology Act.

“As is said, every idea will have to wait for its time. Perhaps the time for CBDCs is near,” he remarked.

He also highlighted some the risks associated with digital currencies, like sudden flight of money from a bank under stress.

“There are associated risks…but they need to be carefully evaluated against the potential benefits,” he added.

The finance ministry, in 2017, had set up a high level inter-ministerial committee to examine the policy and legal framework for regulation of virtual / crypto currencies. It had recommended the introduction of CBDCs as a digital form of fiat money in India.

The RBI has also been exploring the pros and cons of introduction of CBDCs since quite some time.



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Central bank-issued digital coins seen co-existing with Bitcoin, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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By Matthew Leising

Cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ether will co-exist “for a while” with more-restrictive digital coins such as the one issued by China’s central bank, according to Changpeng Zhao, chief executive officer of Binance.

Zhao, who runs the world’s largest Bitcoin exchange, said digital assets issued by central banks will be different than public coins in many ways. They won’t offer the same freedom of use and won’t have a supply cap in place, Zhao, who’s also known as CZ, said Monday in a Bloomberg TV interview.

“Most central-bank digital currencies are going to have a lot of control attached to them,” Zhao said. Differences between the two types of coins could make the central-bank version unattractive to people drawn to the crypto world. “At the end of the day, those are core properties that users care about,” he said.

Bitcoin and Ether have hit all-time highs this year as institutional investors and corporations buy cryptocurrencies to add to their balance sheets. Ether hit a record $3,339 Monday. While Bitcoin is used only for transferring digital value, Ether supports the Ethereum blockchain on which more types of transactions are possible.

User demand for Ether to buy assets such as non-fungible tokens also could be driving prices higher, Zhao said.

“All of these use cases are moving right now and people need the other coins to do this type of new transaction,” he said. “Ethereum is one of those clear examples. That’s probably why Ether is going up.”

About 70% of Binance users are retail customers with the rest being institutional investors, he said. He has no plans to take the company public and follow in the footsteps of Coinbase Global Inc., which listed shares directly on Nasdaq last month.

Binance is making money on its own and doesn’t need to raise more, he said.



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Inevitable rise of CBDC’s in the digital age, BFSI News, ET BFSI

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Digitalization has thrown almost every part of the economy into disarray, and the payment system is no exception. Cash use has decreased significantly across developed and developing economies as customers have accepted the convenience and ease of digital payments. Privately run solutions have taken substantial market share. These range from well-established (debit and credit cards) to early stage (cryptocurrencies). According to Morgan Stanley, the failure of physical cash to play an effective role in the digital economy raises the risk that monetary authorities will fail to provide the population with a stable, accessible, and reliable means of payment. To protect their monetary sovereignty and mitigate financial stability concerns Central banks are on track to introduce their own digital currencies in the coming years that is Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC).

Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) are a new form of money – digital cash, developed and backed by the central bank with the aim of facilitating digital transactions and transfers. CBDC would offer a new type of widely accessible, digitally issued money. Importantly, CBDC will not be a cryptocurrency, Cryptocurrencies are designed to work without a central issuing or controlling authority, have a fixed or system-determined money supply, and use distributed ledger technology to record and validate individual transactions using cryptography (blockchain). CBDC, on the other hand, requires none of these characteristics. The central banks retain complete control over the currency and its issuance and in most of the cases will track and certify transactions through a centralised ledger.

Central banks will have to make three main design decisions when developing their digital currency systems: Who has access to digital currencies issued by central banks? How are they going to be accessed? What type does a digital currency take in terms of technology?.86% of the world’s central banks are exploring the issuance of central bank digital currencies. The PBoC has already put its eCNY initiative to the test in three major Chinese cities. The ECB will release the results of its recently concluded public consultations and could announce its intention to develop a digital Europe by the summer. In the United States, Fed Chair Powell has described digital currency as a “high priority initiative,” with the Boston Fed preparing to launch one.

Morgan Stanley reported, even without a CBDC, India is an instructive example, Policymakers have taken the lead in developing the public data infrastructure that enables advanced and widely available payment solutions. The public sector has created a strong foundation for private sector innovation to promote payments and increase financial inclusion by providing a national identity verification system (Aadhaar), an instant real-time payment system at the central bank (United Payment Interface), and a comprehensive legal framework on data privacy. As a result, India now has a highly modernised payments infrastructure and has surpassed other emerging markets in terms of financial inclusion.

Morgan Stanley anticipates that central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) will help to strengthen monetary sovereignty and alleviate concerns about financial stability, but they pose a risk of disruption to commercial banks and the financial ecosystem. While central banks’ efforts at introducing CBDC are not intended to disrupt the banking system, it will likely have unintended disruptive effects. Banks will face disruption from three fronts; First, depending on the degree to which consumers can move their bank deposits to CBDC accounts, banks’ deposit bases can shrink. Second, CBDC’s technical framework could make it easier for new entrants to enter the payments market without having to rely on incumbent banks. Third, as more of the transactions move to CBDC, which are likely to include privacy safeguards, banks will have to compete harder for access to consumers’ spending data. The central banks’ design choices would have a significant effect on how much disruption occurs on all three fronts. The speed at which network effects take place in a CBDC system can determine how easily disruption occurs. The greater the acceptance of digital currencies, the more opportunities for innovation and the greater is the risk of financial system disruption.



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RBI has major concerns on cryptocurrencies, flagged it to govt: Das

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The Reserve Bank of India has “major concerns” on the cryptocurrencies traded in the market and has conveyed the same to the government, its governor Shaktikanta Das on Thursday said.

Underlining that both the government and the RBI are “committed to financial stability”, Das said there are no differences between the central bank and the Finance Ministry on the matter, and “we should now await the final decision on the matter” from the Centre.

Also read: Economic activity to continue unabated: RBI Governor

The comments come in light of what has been termed as confusing signals from the government on the cryptocurrencies. After announcing its intent to completely ban such currencies, which are very volatile in nature without any underlying principle guiding its values, the government had shown some openness to such currencies like Bitcoin.

“Central bank digital currency is one thing. The cryptocurrencies which are traded in the market are something else. Both RBI and government are committed to financial stability. We have flagged certain concerns around these cryptocurrencies which are being traded in the market. We have flagged certain major concerns to the government,” Das said.

He said the matter is still under the examination of the government, and a decision on this issue will be taken by it sooner than later.

It can be noted that the RBI had first banned such currencies through an order, which was struck down by the Supreme Court last year. The central bank’s concerns stem from the non-fiat nature of such currencies which are touted as the future in some quarters, and in the volatile price movements in them. In the past, the RBI had also come out with an appeal cautioning people not to trade in such currencies.

After the government proposed a complete ban on such currencies in a Bill presented in January, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman had earlier this month said that she is all for encouraging experiments in the field, which was termed as a confusing signal in some quarters.

Das on Thursday said the RBI continues its work on a digital version of a fiat currency, and is currently “assessing the financial stability implications of introducing such a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC)”.

“As the underlying technology is still developing, we are exploring ways for a clear, safe and legally certain settlement finality, which is most crucial for a secure and efficient payment system,” he said.

Das added that there are not many “practical instances” of operationalisation of a CBDC globally, and this calls for “utmost precaution” before India goes ahead.

Meanwhile, Das said digital is the future across the banking landscape and “we will have a lot of shifts taking place on this front going ahead”.

From a regulatory perspective, fostering effective regulations will be a priority for the RBI, he said, adding it is an endeavour not to constrain innovations but to promote those without compromising on financial sector stability, cybersecurity and customer protection.

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