The Parliament Magazine

THE FUTURE IS CRYPTOGRAP­HIC

Europe is on its way to becoming a global standardse­tter in digital finance,

- Stefan Berger

The digital transforma­tion is as fundamenta­l as the one that occurred during the industrial revolution. It was not without reason that European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen emphasised, in her political guidelines, that creating “a Europe fit for the digital age” would be one of her priorities. Building on this vision, we need to promote a strong and vibrant digital finance sector with a backbone of appropriat­e regulation and innovation at its heart. Europe must embrace financial technologi­es that can improve the e ciency of the financial system.

The objective should be to augment the competitiv­eness of the European Fintech sector and to develop a comprehens­ive regulatory framework for crypto-assets such as stablecoin­s. In adopting the Digital Finance Package, the European Commission has already taken major steps to accelerate the EU’s digital finance transition. Neverthele­ss, Europe also needs to deliver a secure, value-stable alternativ­e to Facebook’s digital ‘Libra’ currency, by creating a digital euro. Ultimately, the question is not whether we will use digital money, but who will issue and control it.

The EU’s Digital Finance Package is a cornerston­e in our financial system. We all have witnessed the digitalisa­tion of our payment system, beginning with the credit

“Europe needs to deliver a secure, value-stable alternativ­e to Facebook’s digital ‘Libra’ currency by creating a digital euro. At the end of the day, the question is not if we will use digital money, but who will issue and control it”

card, going to bitcoins and culminatin­g in stablecoin­s. More than ever, European citizens as well as businesses are making use of the new opportunit­ies offered by digital finance, for example through online payments, digital crowdfundi­ng or peerto-peer lending. Yet, there remain barriers to address in this market. In September, the Commission adopted a Digital Finance Package, which paves the way for Europe to become a global standard-setter in the financial sector.

The package includes Digital Finance and Retail Payments Strategies, as well as legislativ­e proposals on crypto-assets and digital resilience. The Commission’s FinTech Action Plan is a pillar for more integrated, safer and more-easily accessible financial markets.

The current parliament­ary report on “Markets in Crypto-Assets”

(MiCA) is fundamenta­l to Europe’s crypto-adaptation. It will boost innovation while preserving financial stability and protecting investors from risks. We must create a harmonised market, promote legal certainty for crypto-asset issuers and ensure a level playing field for service providers.

Crypto-assets are digital representa­tions of values or rights, transferre­d and stored electronic­ally. The global crypto market has become too big for countries and central banks to ignore; at the beginning of 2020, over 5,100 crypto-assets existed with a total market capitalisa­tion exceeding $250bn. Previously unregulate­d assets, known as ‘stablecoin­s’, are a relatively recent payment innovation that will now be addressed by an adequate regulatory framework. In contrast to assets such as Bitcoins, stablecoin­s rely on a set of stabilisat­ion tools that minimise fluctuatio­ns. In the wake of the announced introducti­on of Facebook’s digital currency ‘Libra”’ stablecoin­s have become the subject of particular­ly-heated political debates.

Facebooks’ Libra is designed to be a global currency and financial infrastruc­ture enabling cheap and convenient financial transactio­ns. Transferri­ng Libra money across borders will supposedly be faster and safer than sending text messages. More precisely, seven times faster than Visa-based payment systems, according to the recently published ‘Fast Pay’ White Paper by Facebook’s Novi wallet developers. However, at the same time, the coin could be misused as a tool for money laundering and terrorist financing, not to mention consumer concerns over the protection of personal data coupled with financial informatio­n. The Libra Associatio­n, which mainly consisting of private companies such as Spotify or Uber, would be in control of financial transactio­ns, and - by the way – would hoard trillions of dollars from the interest paid on the securities in the Libra reserve.

The best European answer to private currency projects like Libra is to issue a complement­ary digital euro. Who would not trust a central bank over a Zuckerberg? With a regulated, secure and value-stable e-euro, suitable for meeting the needs of the financial market, Europe can set standards, instead of following others. A digital euro would be the proof of progress and integratio­n in Europe. It is not an option, but a requiremen­t to achieve digital sovereignt­y. Only with a European Central Bank that can o er citizens something more valuable than a private company like Facebook, can Europe be regarded as “fit for the digital age”.

“A digital euro would be the proof of progress and integratio­n in Europe. It is not an option, but a requiremen­t to achieve digital sovereignt­y”

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