var TRINITY_TTS_WP_CONFIG={“cleanText”:”Jerome Powell denies having CBDC lab, study says u2018cryptou2019 wonu2019t become money.u23f8U.S. Federal Reserveu00a0Chairmanu00a0Jerome Powellu00a0insists he’s not a Bond villain plotting to unleash au00a0central bank digital currencyu00a0(CBDC), while a new study says concerns aboutu00a0BTC and other digital currency tokens ever serving as global currency are overblown.u23f8On March 20, Powell announced that the Fed had decided to hold interest rates at their current range of 5.25-5.5% but reiterated previous statements that three small cutsu2014to a target of around 4.6%u2014are likely before the year is through. But for our purposes, we’ll focus on his comments regarding Republicans’ night terrors that the Fed is plotting to spring a draconian CBDC on an unsuspecting America.u23f8Asked to clarify the Fed’s CBDC plans, Powellu00a0said: “We haven’t come to a conclusion that we should propose u2026 that Congress consider legislation to authorize a digital dollar. And it would take legislation by Congress signed by the president to give us the ability to do what we think of as a CBDC, which is really a retail CBDC, with the public. So we’re just a long, long way from that.u23f8″What we are doingu2014and I think what every major central bank is doingu2014is we’re trying to stay in the frontiers of what’s going on in digital finance. And it has many, many different areas. It has applications in wholesale finance, [and] in theu00a0payments systemu00a0u2026 these issues have become very front burner in the last five or six years. We need to be knowledgeable about all that. So, we actually do have people trying to understand things.u23f8″But it’s wrong to say that we’re working on a CBDC and we’ve secretly got a lab here u2026 and we’re just gonna spring it on Congress at the right moment. We don’t. I haven’t at all, in my own mind, made a decision that I think this is something the U.S. should be doing. I just thinku00a0it’s something we need to understandu00a0and we do have people who are keeping up with that as part of the broader payments landscape.”u23f8This likely won’t satisfy the likes of Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN), whou00a0tweeted his suspicionsu23f8 last week that the Fed was planning to let fly its CBDC while America sleeps. God help Powell should a video leak of a secret Fed meeting in which he muses about how a CBDC could be worthu00a0one hundred billion dollars.u23f8Republicans’ CBDC fearsu00a0largely center on the enthusiasm China’s government has for theu00a0citizen surveillance capabilitiesu00a0of itsu00a0digital yuan, which is by far theu00a0most advanced CBDCu00a0going. But other nationsu2014including those thatu00a0Donald Trumpu00a0doesn’tu00a0think are shitholesu2014are indeed weighing the pros and cons of digitizing their currency.u23f8For example, Sweden’s Riksbank issuedu00a0a reportu00a0this week on Phase 4 of itsu00a0e-krona pilot, which focused on synchronizing offline payments with online balances in so-called ‘shadow wallets.’ The takeaway was that “a secure and functional offline solution requires a lot of development cooperation work in terms of technology, regulations and processes.” In other words, it is theoretically possible but not quite there yet.u23f8US stablecoin bill so stable it’s not movingu23f8Republicansu2014some of them, at leastu2014are in favor of approving U.S.-friendly stablecoin legislation before the current Congressional term is over. However, the likelihood of this occurring appears to shrink by the day.u23f8Rep.u00a0Patrick McHenryu00a0(R-NC) attended this week’s Update the System Summit in Washington, DC, where he weighed in on the chances to pass hisu00a0Clarity for Payment Stablecoins Act of 2023. The event, sponsored by theu00a0Coinbaseu00a0(NASDAQ: COIN) digital asset exchange, brought together a range of digital currency stakeholders as well as some federal politicians eager to collect their share of the lobbying millions that Coinbase is throwing around these days.u23f8McHenry, who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, told attendees that he and the Committee’s top Democrat, Rep.u00a0Maxine Waters (D-CA), have “a workable frame” for advancing the stablecoin bill. “We’re at the phase where we can see the airport u2026 we just don’t know when we’re going to land the plane.”u23f8However, other speakers suggested the two sides were still miles apart on who will oversee issuers of so-called ‘payment stablecoins’ (an artificial distinction cooked up to favoru00a0USDCu2014the stablecoin issued by Coinbase’s partneru00a0Circleu2014over the international rapscallions known asu00a0Tetheru00a0and theiru00a0crime-friendly USDT). McHenry favors leaving oversight to the states, while Waters is pushing for a federal role.u23f8McHenry spoke of the need to attach the stablecoin bill to a “legislative vehicle” with greater support/urgency and was therefore far more likely to pass in a deeply divided House. Assuming it clears that hurdle, it would then have to make it through the Senate, where Sens. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) are working on their own stablecoin bill (a follow-up to the pair’su00a0previous legislative efforts).u23f8In other words, with the legislative clock rapidly ticking down to Novemberu2014and both Congressional chambers taking a two-week break as of Fridayu2014nobody should be counting their stablechickens before they hatch.u23f8Not so disruptive disruptoru23f8While U.S. companies like Coinbase and Circle push their ‘payment stablecoin’ fantasies, the number of people worldwide using tokens as cash remains minuscule.u00a0A new academic study suggests digital currency as a whole will continue to struggle to become an accepted form of payment in many countries, but maybe not for the reasons you think.u23f8The study,u00a0Explaining variation in national cryptocurrency regulation: implications for the global political economy,u00a0pokes holes in the widely held belief (amongst ‘crypto bros,’ at least) that certain tokens are poised to usurp the U.S. dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency. The dollar is increasingly seen as vulnerable due to the rapidly expanding federal debt and ongoing efforts by rival nations tou00a0undermine U.S. financial hegemony.u23f8However, the study’s authors concluded that “cryptocurrency threatens the international political and economic status quo less than many speculate because regimes most likely to be at odds with U.S. monetary and financial dominance face a strong incentive to ban the technologies in their own countries.”u23f8The authors note that countries most vehemently opposed to welcoming digital currency into the financial mainstream include many authoritarian regimes with no great love for the U.S. of A. These regimes traditionally micromanage every aspect of their local economies, like China’s strict capital controls that limit how much money its citizens can send abroad yearly.u23f8Other countries’ peg’ their currencies to the dollar or a basket of prominent currencies in order to restrict volatility. Given digital currency’s notorious volatilityu2014thinku00a0Tesla’s short-lived experimentu00a0with allowing customers to purchase cars with BTC, provided theyu00a0fork over the tokens within minutesu00a0of fixing a priceu2014basing an economy on such unstable tokens would be a recipe for fiscal chaos that could threaten an autocrat’s hold on power.u23f8The authors of the study noted that dollar-basedu00a0stablecoins have proven popular in countries undergoing rapid inflation and devaluations of their local currencies, including Argentina, Lebanon, and Turkey. The authors suggest this could ultimately strengthen the dollar’s international role, although some more security-conscious U.S. legislators might see things differently.u23f8There’s also the chance that Circle has to be bailed out by the U.S. federal government again like it was in early 2023 afteru00a0Silicon Valley Bank’s failureu00a0ate $3.3 billion in USDC’s fiat reserves. Or the government mightu00a0take Circle’s adviceu00a0and seize the billions in T-bills thatu00a0Cantor Fitzgerald is (allegedly) holding on Tether’s behalf. Such episodes could seriously damper international enthusiasm for digital greenbacks that the U.S. isn’t obligated to recognize as actual dollars.u23f8To learn more about central bank digital currencies and some of the design decisions that need to be considered when creating and launching it, read nChainu2019s CBDC playbook.u23f8Watch: CBDCs are more than just digital moneyu23f8″,”headlineText”:”Jerome Powell denies having CBDC lab, study says u2018cryptou2019 wonu2019t become money”,”articleText”:”U.S. Federal Reserveu00a0Chairmanu00a0Jerome Powellu00a0insists he’s not a Bond villain plotting to unleash au00a0central bank digital currencyu00a0(CBDC), while a new study says concerns aboutu00a0BTC and other digital currency tokens ever serving as global currency are overblown.u23f8On March 20, Powell announced that the Fed had decided to hold interest rates at their current range of 5.25-5.5% but reiterated previous statements that three small cutsu2014to a target of around 4.6%u2014are likely before the year is through. But for our purposes, we’ll focus on his comments regarding Republicans’ night terrors that the Fed is plotting to spring a draconian CBDC on an unsuspecting America.u23f8Asked to clarify the Fed’s CBDC plans, Powellu00a0said: “We haven’t come to a conclusion that we should propose u2026 that Congress consider legislation to authorize a digital dollar. And it would take legislation by Congress signed by the president to give us the ability to do what we think of as a CBDC, which is really a retail CBDC, with the public. So we’re just a long, long way from that.u23f8″What we are doingu2014and I think what every major central bank is doingu2014is we’re trying to stay in the frontiers of what’s going on in digital finance. And it has many, many different areas. It has applications in wholesale finance, [and] in theu00a0payments systemu00a0u2026 these issues have become very front burner in the last five or six years. We need to be knowledgeable about all that. So, we actually do have people trying to understand things.u23f8″But it’s wrong to say that we’re working on a CBDC and we’ve secretly got a lab here u2026 and we’re just gonna spring it on Congress at the right moment. We don’t. I haven’t at all, in my own mind, made a decision that I think this is something the U.S. should be doing. I just thinku00a0it’s something we need to understandu00a0and we do have people who are keeping up with that as part of the broader payments landscape.”u23f8This likely won’t satisfy the likes of Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN), whou00a0tweeted his suspicionsu23f8 last week that the Fed was planning to let fly its CBDC while America sleeps. God help Powell should a video leak of a secret Fed meeting in which he muses about how a CBDC could be worthu00a0one hundred billion dollars.u23f8Republicans’ CBDC fearsu00a0largely center on the enthusiasm China’s government has for theu00a0citizen surveillance capabilitiesu00a0of itsu00a0digital yuan, which is by far theu00a0most advanced CBDCu00a0going. But other nationsu2014including those thatu00a0Donald Trumpu00a0doesn’tu00a0think are shitholesu2014are indeed weighing the pros and cons of digitizing their currency.u23f8For example, Sweden’s Riksbank issuedu00a0a reportu00a0this week on Phase 4 of itsu00a0e-krona pilot, which focused on synchronizing offline payments with online balances in so-called ‘shadow wallets.’ The takeaway was that “a secure and functional offline solution requires a lot of development cooperation work in terms of technology, regulations and processes.” In other words, it is theoretically possible but not quite there yet.u23f8US stablecoin bill so stable it’s not movingu23f8Republicansu2014some of them, at leastu2014are in favor of approving U.S.-friendly stablecoin legislation before the current Congressional term is over. However, the likelihood of this occurring appears to shrink by the day.u23f8Rep.u00a0Patrick McHenryu00a0(R-NC) attended this week’s Update the System Summit in Washington, DC, where he weighed in on the chances to pass hisu00a0Clarity for Payment Stablecoins Act of 2023. The event, sponsored by theu00a0Coinbaseu00a0(NASDAQ: COIN) digital asset exchange, brought together a range of digital currency stakeholders as well as some federal politicians eager to collect their share of the lobbying millions that Coinbase is throwing around these days.u23f8McHenry, who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, told attendees that he and the Committee’s top Democrat, Rep.u00a0Maxine Waters (D-CA), have “a workable frame” for advancing the stablecoin bill. “We’re at the phase where we can see the airport u2026 we just don’t know when we’re going to land the plane.”u23f8However, other speakers suggested the two sides were still miles apart on who will oversee issuers of so-called ‘payment stablecoins’ (an artificial distinction cooked up to favoru00a0USDCu2014the stablecoin issued by Coinbase’s partneru00a0Circleu2014over the international rapscallions known asu00a0Tetheru00a0and theiru00a0crime-friendly USDT). McHenry favors leaving oversight to the states, while Waters is pushing for a federal role.u23f8McHenry spoke of the need to attach the stablecoin bill to a “legislative vehicle” with greater support/urgency and was therefore far more likely to pass in a deeply divided House. Assuming it clears that hurdle, it would then have to make it through the Senate, where Sens. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) are working on their own stablecoin bill (a follow-up to the pair’su00a0previous legislative efforts).u23f8In other words, with the legislative clock rapidly ticking down to Novemberu2014and both Congressional chambers taking a two-week break as of Fridayu2014nobody should be counting their stablechickens before they hatch.u23f8Not so disruptive disruptoru23f8While U.S. companies like Coinbase and Circle push their ‘payment stablecoin’ fantasies, the number of people worldwide using tokens as cash remains minuscule.u00a0A new academic study suggests digital currency as a whole will continue to struggle to become an accepted form of payment in many countries, but maybe not for the reasons you think.u23f8The study,u00a0Explaining variation in national cryptocurrency regulation: implications for the global political economy,u00a0pokes holes in the widely held belief (amongst ‘crypto bros,’ at least) that certain tokens are poised to usurp the U.S. dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency. The dollar is increasingly seen as vulnerable due to the rapidly expanding federal debt and ongoing efforts by rival nations tou00a0undermine U.S. financial hegemony.u23f8However, the study’s authors concluded that “cryptocurrency threatens the international political and economic status quo less than many speculate because regimes most likely to be at odds with U.S. monetary and financial dominance face a strong incentive to ban the technologies in their own countries.”u23f8The authors note that countries most vehemently opposed to welcoming digital currency into the financial mainstream include many authoritarian regimes with no great love for the U.S. of A. These regimes traditionally micromanage every aspect of their local economies, like China’s strict capital controls that limit how much money its citizens can send abroad yearly.u23f8Other countries’ peg’ their currencies to the dollar or a basket of prominent currencies in order to restrict volatility. Given digital currency’s notorious volatilityu2014thinku00a0Tesla’s short-lived experimentu00a0with allowing customers to purchase cars with BTC, provided theyu00a0fork over the tokens within minutesu00a0of fixing a priceu2014basing an economy on such unstable tokens would be a recipe for fiscal chaos that could threaten an autocrat’s hold on power.u23f8The authors of the study noted that dollar-basedu00a0stablecoins have proven popular in countries undergoing rapid inflation and devaluations of their local currencies, including Argentina, Lebanon, and Turkey. The authors suggest this could ultimately strengthen the dollar’s international role, although some more security-conscious U.S. legislators might see things differently.u23f8There’s also the chance that Circle has to be bailed out by the U.S. federal government again like it was in early 2023 afteru00a0Silicon Valley Bank’s failureu00a0ate $3.3 billion in USDC’s fiat reserves. Or the government mightu00a0take Circle’s adviceu00a0and seize the billions in T-bills thatu00a0Cantor Fitzgerald is (allegedly) holding on Tether’s behalf. Such episodes could seriously damper international enthusiasm for digital greenbacks that the U.S. isn’t obligated to recognize as actual dollars.u23f8To learn more about central bank digital currencies and some of the design decisions that need to be considered when creating and launching it, read nChainu2019s CBDC playbook.u23f8Watch: CBDCs are more than just digital moneyu23f8″,”metadata”:{“author”:”Steven Stradbrooke”},”pluginVersion”:”5.7.4″}; |
U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell insists he’s not a Bond villain plotting to unleash a central bank digital currency (CBDC), while a new study says concerns about BTC and other digital currency tokens ever serving as global currency are overblown.
On March 20, Powell announced that the Fed had decided to hold interest rates at their current range of 5.25-5.5% but reiterated previous statements that three small cuts—to a target of around 4.6%—are likely before the year is through. But for our purposes, we’ll focus on his comments regarding Republicans’ night terrors that the Fed is plotting to spring a draconian CBDC on an unsuspecting America.
Asked to clarify the Fed’s CBDC plans, Powell said: “We haven’t come to a conclusion that we should propose … that Congress consider legislation to authorize a digital dollar. And it would take legislation by Congress signed by the president to give us the ability to do what we think of as a CBDC, which is really a retail CBDC, with the public. So we’re just a long, long way from that.
“What we are doing—and I think what every major central bank is doing—is we’re trying to stay in the frontiers of what’s going on in digital finance. And it has many, many different areas. It has applications in wholesale finance, [and] in the payments system … these issues have become very front burner in the last five or six years. We need to be knowledgeable about all that. So, we actually do have people trying to understand things.
“But it’s wrong to say that we’re working on a CBDC and we’ve secretly got a lab here … and we’re just gonna spring it on Congress at the right moment. We don’t. I haven’t at all, in my own mind, made a decision that I think this is something the U.S. should be doing. I just think it’s something we need to understand and we do have people who are keeping up with that as part of the broader payments landscape.”
This likely won’t satisfy the likes of Rep. Tom Emmer (R-MN), who tweeted his suspicions
last week that the Fed was planning to let fly its CBDC while America sleeps. God help Powell should a video leak of a secret Fed meeting in which he muses about how a CBDC could be worth one hundred billion dollars.
Republicans’ CBDC fears largely center on the enthusiasm China’s government has for the citizen surveillance capabilities of its digital yuan, which is by far the most advanced CBDC going. But other nations—including those that Donald Trump doesn’t think are shitholes—are indeed weighing the pros and cons of digitizing their currency.
For example, Sweden’s Riksbank issued a report this week on Phase 4 of its e-krona pilot, which focused on synchronizing offline payments with online balances in so-called ‘shadow wallets.’ The takeaway was that “a secure and functional offline solution requires a lot of development cooperation work in terms of technology, regulations and processes.” In other words, it is theoretically possible but not quite there yet.
US stablecoin bill so stable it’s not moving
Republicans—some of them, at least—are in favor of approving U.S.-friendly stablecoin legislation before the current Congressional term is over. However, the likelihood of this occurring appears to shrink by the day.
Rep. Patrick McHenry (R-NC) attended this week’s Update the System Summit in Washington, DC, where he weighed in on the chances to pass his Clarity for Payment Stablecoins Act of 2023. The event, sponsored by the Coinbase (NASDAQ: COIN) digital asset exchange, brought together a range of digital currency stakeholders as well as some federal politicians eager to collect their share of the lobbying millions that Coinbase is throwing around these days.
McHenry, who chairs the House Financial Services Committee, told attendees that he and the Committee’s top Democrat, Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA), have “a workable frame” for advancing the stablecoin bill. “We’re at the phase where we can see the airport … we just don’t know when we’re going to land the plane.”
However, other speakers suggested the two sides were still miles apart on who will oversee issuers of so-called ‘payment stablecoins’ (an artificial distinction cooked up to favor USDC—the stablecoin issued by Coinbase’s partner Circle—over the international rapscallions known as Tether and their crime-friendly USDT). McHenry favors leaving oversight to the states, while Waters is pushing for a federal role.
McHenry spoke of the need to attach the stablecoin bill to a “legislative vehicle” with greater support/urgency and was therefore far more likely to pass in a deeply divided House. Assuming it clears that hurdle, it would then have to make it through the Senate, where Sens. Cynthia Lummis (R-WY) and Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) are working on their own stablecoin bill (a follow-up to the pair’s previous legislative efforts).
In other words, with the legislative clock rapidly ticking down to November—and both Congressional chambers taking a two-week break as of Friday—nobody should be counting their stablechickens before they hatch.
Not so disruptive disruptor
While U.S. companies like Coinbase and Circle push their ‘payment stablecoin’ fantasies, the number of people worldwide using tokens as cash remains minuscule. A new academic study suggests digital currency as a whole will continue to struggle to become an accepted form of payment in many countries, but maybe not for the reasons you think.
The study, Explaining variation in national cryptocurrency regulation: implications for the global political economy, pokes holes in the widely held belief (amongst ‘crypto bros,’ at least) that certain tokens are poised to usurp the U.S. dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency. The dollar is increasingly seen as vulnerable due to the rapidly expanding federal debt and ongoing efforts by rival nations to undermine U.S. financial hegemony.
However, the study’s authors concluded that “cryptocurrency threatens the international political and economic status quo less than many speculate because regimes most likely to be at odds with U.S. monetary and financial dominance face a strong incentive to ban the technologies in their own countries.”
The authors note that countries most vehemently opposed to welcoming digital currency into the financial mainstream include many authoritarian regimes with no great love for the U.S. of A. These regimes traditionally micromanage every aspect of their local economies, like China’s strict capital controls that limit how much money its citizens can send abroad yearly.
Other countries’ peg’ their currencies to the dollar or a basket of prominent currencies in order to restrict volatility. Given digital currency’s notorious volatility—think Tesla’s short-lived experiment with allowing customers to purchase cars with BTC, provided they fork over the tokens within minutes of fixing a price—basing an economy on such unstable tokens would be a recipe for fiscal chaos that could threaten an autocrat’s hold on power.
The authors of the study noted that dollar-based stablecoins have proven popular in countries undergoing rapid inflation and devaluations of their local currencies, including Argentina, Lebanon, and Turkey. The authors suggest this could ultimately strengthen the dollar’s international role, although some more security-conscious U.S. legislators might see things differently.
There’s also the chance that Circle has to be bailed out by the U.S. federal government again like it was in early 2023 after Silicon Valley Bank’s failure ate $3.3 billion in USDC’s fiat reserves. Or the government might take Circle’s advice and seize the billions in T-bills that Cantor Fitzgerald is (allegedly) holding on Tether’s behalf. Such episodes could seriously damper international enthusiasm for digital greenbacks that the U.S. isn’t obligated to recognize as actual dollars.
To learn more about central bank digital currencies and some of the design decisions that need to be considered when creating and launching it, read nChain’s CBDC playbook.
Watch: CBDCs are more than just digital money
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