The Citizen (Gauteng)

Central banks, BIS develop digital currency

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Several central banks and the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s have developed prototypes for a common digital currencies platform that has the potential to make cross-border payments more efficient.

The two prototypes demonstrat­e the technical viability of such a platform, the BIS said in a statement yesterday with the Reserve Bank of Australia, Bank Negara Malaysia, the Monetary Authority of Singapore, and the South African Reserve Bank.

Codenamed “Project Dunbar”, the developmen­t also proves that financial institutio­ns could use central bank digital currencies to transact directly with one another on a shared platform, reducing the need for intermedia­ries and cutting costs and time.

“A common platform is the most efficient model for payments connectivi­ty but is also the most challengin­g to achieve,” said Andrew McCormack, head of the BIS Innovation Hub Centre in Singapore.

Globally, central banks are trying to come to terms with emerging payment technologi­es pioneered by tech firms including China’s Ant Group.

Additional­ly, Facebook’s Diem project, formerly known as Libra, is building out a global payments network that could service its own stablecoin or central bank digital currencies.

The rapid growth of cryptocurr­encies – which are distinct from digital currencies issued by central banks – is posing a potential threat to existing monetary regimes and adding urgency to debates on handling cross-border money transfers.

“While there is clearly more work to be done in thinking about the feasibilit­y and design of multi-CBDC platforms, the findings from Project Dunbar provide a good platform for future work,” said RBA assistant governor Michele Bullock.

Next steps include the developmen­t of a detailed platform rulebook, reviewing legal and regulatory frameworks across participat­ing jurisdicti­ons, formation of governance committees for the project which could potentiall­y transit into governance committees for a future live regional platform.

Finally, technical developmen­t and testing at a large-scale industry level would then be required at a regional level.

A common platform is the most efficient model for payments connectivi­ty but is also the most challengin­g to achieve.

Andrew McCormack Head of the BIS Innovation Hub Centre in Singapore

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