Toronto Star

BoC may fast track developmen­t of digital coin

Evolving tech and COVID-19’s online shopping wave add urgency, deputy governor says

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA— A pandemic-related shifts in how people shop, sending more people into cyberspace than a physical space, means central banks must speed up work on creating their own digital currencies, says a top Bank of Canada official.

COVID-19 has meant more people are shopping online, and foot traffic for brick-and-mortar storefront­s hasn’t caught up to pre-pandemic levels for many small and medium-sized businesses.

Bank of Canada deputy governor Timothy Lane said that shift in spending habits coupled with the speed of technologi­cal developmen­ts has narrowed the window to deliver a digital currency issued by the central bank.

“This is all looking a lot more urgent because of the speed with which technology is evolving and particular­ly, I think, with COVID we’ve seen an accelerati­on of the shift of activities online,” Lane said during the webinar.

“That suggests that if we want to be ready to develop any kind of digital central bank product, we need to move faster than we thought was going to be necessary.”

The comments from an online panel

on Wednesday are a shift from late February, just before the pandemic struck, when Lane suggested the timeline to create a digital currency was long.

He suggested on Wednesday that many central banks still believe there isn’t a compelling case for them to immediatel­y issue a central bank-backed digital currency, but circumstan­ces are changing rapidly.

Just this week, the Financial Stability Board, an internatio­nal group that counts the Bank of Canada and the federal Finance

Department as members, issued recommenda­tions on how authoritie­s should regulate “stablecoin­s” backed by currency holdings.

“The world is changing so quickly that if we want to have something that’s actually viable, and could be launched in a suitable timeframe, we need to be moving pretty quickly and deliberate­ly to develop something,” Lane said during the panel hosted by the Reinventin­g Bretton Woods Committee and the Chamber of Digital Commerce.

The Bank of Canada has started work on its own digital currency should others become widely used in Canada and erode the central bank’s ability to manage monetary policy, but earlier this year officials believed they had a long timeline to create one before the Canadian dollar wasn’t used for most transactio­ns.

The work builds on six-plus years of research into the growth of volatile digital currencies like bitcoin and stable-coins that maintain a stable value, as the name implies.

As it stands, the Bank of Canada can design, issue and distribute the bills Canadians hand over when buying a cup of coffee, but it doesn’t have the legislativ­e authority from Parliament to offer a digital currency.

But over the course of the pandemic, the central bank has watched as some businesses have stopped accepting cash over health concerns, much to the Bank of Canada’s dismay.

If cash stops being widely accepted, there will be people excluded from the economy, Lane said Wednesday, such as disadvanta­ged people who pay with paper and not plastic.

There are also wider privacy issues that need to addressed with a digital currency, he said, not to mention cross-border concerns.

“If one country introduces a central bank digital currency, then that immediatel­y creates the potential for other countries to be affected … and that can create a whole other set of issues.”

Lane said the bank would have to hold widespread consultati­ons to understand what Canadians would want in a digital currency before the central bank could issue one.

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