Bank of Korea’s new Governor and ex-BIS Chief Economist, Hyun Song Shin, used his inauguration speech to pledge support for expanding central bank digital currency (CBDC) and bank-issued deposit tokens through the second phase of Project Hangang and cooperation with global initiatives like BIS’s Project Agora to strengthen the won’s role in digital payments, while emphasizing price stability amid external shocks. He conspicuously omitted any reference to won-pegged stablecoins even as lawmakers, backed by President Lee Jae-myung, work on a Digital Asset Basic Act to legally frame local stablecoins, and major financial firms prepare related products, with the bill’s progress delayed until after June regional elections. [The Block]
Japan Securities Clearing Corporation (JSCC) will run a proof of concept (POC) with Mizuho, Nomura and Digital Asset to use Japanese government bonds (JGBs) as onchain collateral on the Canton Network, testing whether JGBs can be transferred and managed digitally while retaining their legal status and enabling 24/7, potentially cross-border, real-time collateral transactions under existing Japanese law. The trial, backed by Japan’s Financial Services Agency under its Payment Innovation Project, aims to inform how one of the world’s largest sovereign bond markets could support digital collateral processes without changing current legal and supervisory frameworks, and follows earlier Canton pilots with tokenized US Treasuries and parallel UK experiments with digital gilts in the Bank of England’s Digital Securities Sandbox. [JSCC]
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
The Government of Canada published a federal framework in which non‑bank issuers of fiat‑backed stablecoins must register with the Bank of Canada, maintain fully backed high‑quality liquid reserves, and offer at‑par redemption in the reference currency. The framework centralizes prudential oversight at the Bank of Canada while leaving trading, payments, and anti‑money‑laundering oversight to existing securities and payments regimes, aiming to enable innovation and competition in digital payments while tightening consumer protection and financial stability safeguards. It is explicitly designed to align with European Union and United States approaches and with Financial Stability Board recommendations, positioning Canadian‑issued coins for prospective cross‑border interoperability. Key open questions concern how detailed reserve, redemption, and governance standards will be calibrated in regulation over 2026–27 and how authorities will exercise expansive national‑security and public‑interest powers to deny or revoke market access. [Government of Canada]
KfW announces that its third blockchain-based crypto security will migrate both registrar and distributed ledger infrastructure mid‑term to stress‑test Germany’s Electronic Securities Act framework under real market conditions. The bond will shift registrar functions from Cashlink to DekaBank and move from the Polygon blockchain to SWIAT/Regulated Layer One, while also switching wholesale payment processing from the Deutsche Bundesbank’s trigger solution at issuance to the Eurosystem’s forthcoming Pontes platform for coupons and redemption. This staged migration aims to generate evidence for scalable, standardized digital capital-market infrastructure in Europe, but leaves open whether secondary-market liquidity and operational risks will prove manageable at scale. [KfW]
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
VISA’s Ezechiel Copic argues that raw stablecoin velocity is a misleading proxy for “economic relevance” because it mostly reflects wholesale‑style financial activity rather than retail spending, so it must be benchmarked against Fedwire‑like turnover rather than M1. It explains that traditional M1 velocity measures how often money is used for purchases of goods and services, whereas total stablecoin velocity—calculated as on‑chain transaction volume divided by circulating supply—captures predominantly trading, settlement, and funding flows. When filtered to transactions of 250 dollars or less as a rough stand‑in for retail payments, stablecoin “retail” velocity is far below U.S. M1 velocity, implying minimal use in everyday commerce. But when compared to a financial‑system benchmark based on Fedwire transaction value relative to reserve balances, stablecoin velocity is still much lower in scale, indicating that while stablecoins show growing importance in financial markets, they remain modest relative to established wholesale infrastructures. Overall, the piece concludes that interpreting stablecoin data requires distinguishing retail from financial‑system use and recognizing that current stablecoin impact is concentrated in the latter. [VISA]
Second Deputy Governor of the Banque de France Agnès Bénassy-Quéré argues that the digital euro responds to Europe’s strategic dependence on Visa and Mastercard and rising card fees, not an abstract techno-fix. Bank cards dominate non-cash payments, yet many euro-area countries lack national schemes and rely entirely on US networks, giving them leverage over European users and pricing. Instant transfers exist but are under-used in retail due to weak commercial front-ends. Bénassy-Quéré argues that the digital euro, rolled out euro-area wide as legal tender, can break network effects, underpin a sovereign infrastructure, and complement private solutions like Wero and EuropA within unified wallets, improving resilience and autonomy. [Banque de France]
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
Banco Central de Reserva del Perú (BCRP) economists examined the determinants of adoption and usage of Peru’s retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) pilot, implemented through Viettel’s BiPay digital wallet beginning in October 2024, focusing on eight regions with low financial inclusion. Based on individual-level survey data, active CBDC usage was positively associated with awareness of the BCRP’s role in the pilot, wallet satisfaction, knowledge of functionalities, and prior digital wallet use, while self-employment was negatively associated, plausibly due to the pilot’s closed-loop, non-interoperable design. Targeted advertising significantly increased merchant adoption, active user counts, and bill payment volumes, with merchant network expansion identified as a key transmission channel. The authors conclude that retail CBDC scaling requires attention to both sides of the payment market — user-facing communication and financial incentives on the demand side, merchant onboarding on the supply side — with interoperability remaining a persistent structural barrier to broader adoption. [IDEAS]
South Korea’s Ministry of Economy and Finance (MOEF) will run a regulatory sandbox pilot in Sejong City to use distributed ledger technology (DLT) based tokenized bank deposits for day‑to‑day government operational spending, testing preset time, amount, and category controls on expenses to improve oversight and reduce misuse, with legal and regulatory changes and nationwide rollout targeted from Q4 2026 as part of a broader plan to digitize around a quarter of treasury disbursements by 2030, building on an earlier tokenized‑deposit subsidy pilot for EV charging infrastructure. https://cointelegraph.com/news/south-korea-pilot-tokenized-deposits-government-spending [MOEF]
Tether has launched tether.wallet, a self‑custodial digital wallet intended to extend its stablecoin‑based payment infrastructure directly to end users in over 160 countries. The product aggregates access to Tether’s digital dollars (USD₮, USA₮), gold (XAU₮), and Bitcoin across multiple networks, abstracts away gas‑token management, and enables transfers via simple human‑readable identifiers, reducing frictions that have limited previous wallet adoption. This move potentially deepens dollarization dynamics in high‑inflation and underbanked jurisdictions while bypassing bank‑intermediated channels. [Tether]
The Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates (CBUAE) and the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to support broader cooperation on financial infrastructure and payments connectivity. This includes working to integrate their instant payment platforms to enable seamless cross-border payment transactions. The MoU also provides for collaboration on central bank digital currency (CBDC) initiatives, including sharing expertise on the development of CBDC platforms for individuals and institutions. [CBUAE]
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
Tony McLaughlin (Ubyx) and Mike Ringer (ReStabilize) argue that regulated financial institutions should be allowed to process stablecoins as collection agents under existing banking law, analogously to cheques. They propose that banks and fintechs receive customer stablecoins, present them for redemption, and credit fiat balances, without being reclassified as crypto-asset dealers. This functional approach would make hosted stablecoin wallets commercially viable within banks and enable reusable identity and compliance credentials for self-custody wallets, expanding the effective regulatory perimeter while preserving non-custodial usage. It could shift stablecoin activity from opaque channels into supervised institutions and position the United Kingdom’s financial infrastructure for future sterling stablecoins and tokenized deposits. The key unresolved question is how legislators and supervisors will define the legal boundary between simple collection activity and broader crypto intermediation. [LinkedIn]
Edgar, Dunn & Company published a survey of the development of stablecoins and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) across the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states. It argues that strategic motivations — reducing dependence on dollar-denominated Western payment infrastructure, modernizing domestic financial systems, and reasserting monetary sovereignty — are driving a coordinated, regulation-first approach to digital currency development. The UAE and Bahrain are identified as the most advanced jurisdictions, with Saudi Arabia positioned as a rising participant focused primarily on wholesale CBDC applications via Project mBridge. Kuwait, Qatar, and Oman remain at earlier stages. The report characterizes the regional model as a two-tier architecture in which state authorities define the regulatory perimeter while private-sector institutions handle distribution and adoption. Several case studies — including the Digital Dirham, AE Coin, mBridge, and ADIB Smart Sukuk — are presented to illustrate current implementation status. [Edgar, Dunn & Company]
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
The IMF published a paper that develops a theoretical framework to analyze the tension between stablecoin stability and issuer incentives. The central finding is that unregulated stablecoin issuers hold excessive risky assets to maximize profits, thereby elevating run risk while failing to internalize the welfare consequences for households. A regulator acting in the broad public interest can improve upon this outcome by mandating high-quality liquid asset backing, ideally central bank reserves, but strict liquidity requirements alone reduce issuer profitability and suppress stablecoin supply below socially optimal levels. The authors argue that achieving both stability and adequate issuance requires two complementary policy instruments: a safe backing asset requirement and a supplementary revenue source for issuers, such as remuneration on reserves or regulated data monetization. The paper draws supporting parallels from China’s e-money experience and situates its findings relative to emerging regulatory frameworks including the U.S. GENIUS Act and the EU’s MiCA regulation. [IMF]
Tiger Research published a report arguing that late‑entry stablecoin issuers can survive only by abandoning the dominant reserve‑interest model and specializing in distinct market niches. The authors show that Tether uses scale to monetize reserves while gradually repairing transparency and building a diversified real‑world asset (RWA) and investment portfolio, turning regulatory normalization into a way to defend its monetary base. StraitsX instead treats stablecoins as payments infrastructure, monetizing fee‑based transaction velocity under a Monetary Authority of Singapore license that converts compliance into a regional moat. M0 repositions issuance as shared infrastructure, using network effects across issuers and builders to become a neutral standard rather than a competing coin. KRWQ treats regulatory gaps and offshore non‑deliverable forward demand as an entry point, using offshore liquidity as an option on future domestic legitimacy, leaving open whether such sequencing can withstand eventual onshore regulatory choices. [Tiger Research]
The Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City (Kansas City Fed) published an article in which Franklin Noll estimates that stablecoins are used predominantly for crypto‑finance trading, with payments accounting for less than 1 percent of supply. He finds roughly half of outstanding stablecoins sit in exchanges, decentralized finance, and related infrastructure, with another large share used for high‑value transfers and a material portion idle in rarely used wallets. This usage pattern implies that stablecoins currently function more as market plumbing and speculative liquidity than as a broad retail or commercial payments instrument, and that reliance on bridges and exchanges highlights interoperability and concentration risks in the ecosystem. [Kansas City Fed]
WalletConnect and Ubyx published a paper arguing that self-custodial wallets can operate within existing anti–money laundering, sanctions, and tax frameworks if regulators adopt technology-neutral, outcomes-based rules and focus obligations on intermediaries at the “edge.” The authors document concrete mechanisms—such as FATF “travel rule” data capture within wallet flows, cryptographic “sign-In with X” ownership proofs, programmable token-level controls, and blockchain analytics—that allow virtual asset service providers to meet customer due diligence, travel rule, and reporting obligations without banning or custodianizing self-custody. This matters because exclusionary rules would push activity offshore, create a two-tier system, and undermine both financial inclusion and supervisory visibility, whereas regulated interoperability preserves open finance benefits while strengthening compliance. The paper highlights unresolved questions around the precise regulatory status of new wallet architectures (trusted execution environments, multi-party computation, bank-deployed wallets) and the scope and consistency of edge-enforcement obligations across jurisdictions. [Walletconnect and Ubyx]
[November 6, 2025] Banco Central de Bolivia (BCB) issued a press release outlining a phased roadmap to explore a wholesale central bank digital currency (CBDC) dubbed the Boliviano Digital through 2026. The plan sequences stakeholder consultations, surveys of potential participants, further technical and regulatory evaluation, and prototype testing in controlled environments to minimize operational and technological risk while building institutional capacity. For policy and market structure, the initiative positions CBDC as an infrastructure upgrade for interbank payments, cost reduction, and innovation. [BCB]
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
In my keynotes at various conferences, I’ve called for a more serious and nuanced consideration of remunerated retail central bank digital currency (RCBDC) a design concept that is often treated very dismissively by central banks. In this post I attempt to synthesize recent theoretical research that assesses how a remunerated RCBDC could impact economies where bank market power suppresses deposit rates and creates structural inefficiencies in the intermediation of credit. Contrary to traditional disintermediation fears, research indicates that a remunerated RCBDC can act as a competitive “outside option,” forcing banks to raise deposit rates. If calibrated to an “intermediate range,” this paradoxically expands the deposit base and increases bank lending by relaxing liquidity and reserve constraints.[1]
Applying Bank Deposit Rate Discipline
Particularly in emerging markets with concentrated banking sectors, a remunerated RCBDC can serve as a benchmark that disciplines bank deposit rate setting. Chiu et al. (2023) and Andolfatto (2021) demonstrate that banks with significant market power often keep deposit rates artificially low to maximize profits. A remunerated RCBDC places a floor on these “sticky” rates, forcing banks to increase them to remain competitive. Andolfatto (2021) highlights that the higher deposit rates can induce the unbanked to enter the formal financial system and current depositors to increase their balances.
Expanding Bank Lending (“Crowding In”)
Chiu et al. (2023) argue that if the RCBDC rate is set correctly, the increase in total deposit volume can outweigh the higher interest cost by expanding loanable funds (“crowding in”). Furthermore, Garratt et al. (2022) note that banks benefit from a “return flow” effect, because a significant portion of the funds they lend out naturally returns to them as deposits due to their market share, which lowers their effective opportunity cost of capital.
Additionally, for banks operating under traditional reserve requirements, a RCBDC that induces deposit growth provides the regulatory headroom needed to back new loans (Andolfatto, 2021). This process also improves the bank’s liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) to the extent that it replaces volatile wholesale funding with stable retail deposits. By reducing the bank’s reliance on liabilities that can exit the bank quickly, the marginal cost of credit is lowered and expanded lending volumes supported.
Garratt et al. (2022) warn that higher RCBDC interest rates that force up deposit rates may increase market concentration. In this scenario, small banks may struggle to match the RCBDC rate while lacking the digital infrastructure of larger rivals, and they may lose deposits to those rivals. However, remunerated RCBDC may provide a “convenience offset” (e.g., speed, interface, universal acceptance) that narrows the competitive gap. This may allow smaller banks to retain deposits without needing to pay higher interest, leveling the playing field.
Funding, Lending and Arbitrage Bottlenecks
The remunerated RCBDC “crowding-in” effect assumes that banks are holding back credit due to a lack of affordable funding (“funding bottleneck”). However, if the primary bottleneck is a scarcity of creditworthy borrowers (“lending bottleneck”), banks already possess sufficient liquidity to satisfy all viable loan applications at current rates. Forcing these banks to raise deposit rates to compete with a RCBDC simply compresses banks’ net interest margins, which may lead to tighter lending standards or higher lending rates and/or fees to maintain profitability, potentially resulting in credit contraction (Chiu et al., 2023).
A third distinct scenario occurs in highly dollarized or open economies where banks engage in offshore arbitrage. In this environment, banks capture local deposits at near-zero rates but, due to structural domestic constraints, choose to invest the majority of these funds in high-yield overseas assets rather than domestic loans. A remunerated CBDC serves as a competitive benchmark that disciplines this “money machine” by providing a high-yield “outside option” for savers. Because these banks are typically over-liquid relative to their domestic loan books, a shift of deposits to the RCBDC does not “crowd out” lending; instead, it redistributes risk-free rents from private bank margins back to the public through CBDC remuneration.
Binding Constraints by Scenario
Funding Bottleneck
Lending Bottleneck
Offshore Arbitrage
Primary Constraint
Banks keep deposit rates low, resulting in a smaller pool of loanable funds.
Lack of creditworthy borrowers or shortage of bank capital.
Deposits captured at low rates and invested in high-yield offshore assets.
CBDC Impact
Breaks the bottleneck, drawing “idle” cash into the system and expands credit.
Squeezes margins without increasing lending, as credit demand is already met.
Reclaims risk-free rents for the public without impacting the domestic credit supply.
Key Indicator
High net interest margins plus high physical cash usage or large unbanked population.
Low credit growth despite high bank liquidity and low interest rates on reserves (IOR).
High offshore placements; wide spreads versus foreign yields; low loan-to-deposit ratios.
Calibrating the RCBDC Rate (“Sweet Spot”)
The macrofinancial outcome depends heavily on the calibration of the RCBDC rate. There should be no impact if the CBDC rate is below bank deposit rates. However, if the CBDC rate exceeds the interest rate on reserves (IOR), banks make a loss on deposits, potentially increasing lending rates and/or disintermediation. To hit the “crowding in” sweet spot, the CBDC rate must below the IOR, so that banks have a strict incentive to retain deposits and continue lending (Andolfatto, 2021).
Guardrails Against Runaway Disintermediation
While theoretical “crowding-in” effects may offer a compelling case for a remunerated RCBDC, the risk of an unconstrained flight from bank deposits can be mitigated with holding limits and/or tiered remuneration. Bindseil (2020) advocates for the latter option, calling for a competitive RCBDC rate on holdings up to some threshold, while holdings exceeding the threshold would earn a significantly lower rate. This obviates the need to impose limits.
Summary and Conclusion
The success of a remunerated RCBDC depends on a deep understanding of the local financial sector. In jurisdictions where funding bottlenecks persist, characterized by high bank market power and significant “idle” physical cash, a remunerated CBDC can serve as a vital structural reform. By disciplining “sticky” retail deposit rates, it draws wealth into the formal system, relaxes regulatory constraints, and expands the volume of credit available to the real economy. In cases of offshore arbitrage, it redistributes risk-free rents back to the public without impacting the domestic credit supply.
Conversely, in jurisdictions facing lending bottlenecks, aggressive remuneration risks destabilizing the financial sector. If banks are already meeting all creditworthy demand, the increased cost of funding will simply compress margins. Consequently, the optimal path is one of controlled calibration: maintaining the RCBDC rate within the “sweet spot” that does not exceed the IOR while utilizing tiered remuneration or holding limits to mitigate disintermediation risks.
[1] In highly competitive banking systems, where deposit rates closely track policy rates, the scope for a RCBDC to “crowd in” lending is significantly diminished. In such environments, a remunerated RCBDC is more likely to lead to disintermediation, as banks lack the monopoly rents necessary to compete for deposits without raising the cost of credit.
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
Part 1 of this series used the CBDCTracker.org database to show that retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) projects are fizzling out, and Part 2 discussed potential reasons why. In some cases, the projects have been mismanaged, but more pervasively, retail CBDCs seem to be redundant digital payment instruments, particularly versus fast payment systems (FPSs).
And although, Bindseil (2026) makes a case for retail CBDCs versus FPSs from a Euro Area policy goal perspective, many of the goals may not resonate strongly with potential users, especially in other jurisdictions (Table 1). For example, does the average user really care about strategic autonomy, monetary sovereignty, and the “anchor” role of central bank money. Plus, deference to financial integrity considerations results in the offering of only “adequate” privacy, while physical cash and crypto-assets provide complete privacy.
Reduce merchant fees and limit payment service provider (PSP) market power
100% v 100%
Preserve strategic autonomy and monetary sovereignty
100% v 66%
Add technical resilience through settlement/front-end redundancy
100% v 33%
Public good and social objectives (financial inclusion and adequate privacy)
100% v 33%
Preserve the “anchor” role of central bank money in retail payments
100% v 0%
However, I remain keen on what Chris Ostrowski and I call “test and deploy” digital currency, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore calls “purpose-bound money”. Both aim at narrow use cases and allow for abbreviated project management cycles because the risks of large-scale (“death star”) retail CBDCs are absent. The National Bank of Kazakhstan has successfully launched purpose-bound RCBDCs using them for public finance targeted payments, conditional transfers and automated compliance scenarios. And recent examples of such pilots by other central banks include:
The Reserve Bank of Australia testing 16 use cases, many of which leverage programmable payments to facilitate multi-party, conditional or escrowed payments, or to enable atomic settlement of transactions in tokenized assets.
The Reserve Bank of India piloting programmable retail CBDC use cases, including targeted government subsidies, agricultural credit, and corporate allowances.
None of this is to say that a “death star” retail CBDC will not be a success somewhere. I can think of several niche cases. One could be overcoming “cross-border” banking sector frictions in the Euro Area. Another could be in jurisdictions where a remunerated retail CBDC could “crowd in” oligopolistic banks that are abusing their market power to suppress deposit rates. I’ll expand on this idea in a future post in this series.
Another special use case is the provision of digital payments when/where connectivity is absent. Several retail CBDC projects have tested stored-value card and device-to-device payment methods that allow for transactions in such cases (IMF, 2025). Private payment service providers seem reluctant to offer such services, so maybe that’s a market failure that calls for retail CBDC intervention?
Lastly, central banks could consider more aggressively pushing the privacy boundaries set by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and other privacy-intrusive regulations. However, this is unlikely for advanced economy central banks and their governments that architected and impose these privacy-invading and financial control tools. And it is just as unlikely for emerging and developing market economy jurisdictions that have to stay compliant to be participants in international commerce and finance. And that finishes my three-part tour of the retail CBDC landscape as it stands today.
[1] Bindseil’s scores are based on a benchmark “fully-effective and well-designed” CBDC that hits all of his five policy goals, and on a low-cost FPS run by the central bank and imposed on all banks and merchants.
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
In Part 1 of this series I used the CBDCTracker.org database to show that retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) projects seem to be fizzling out. Many central banks are putting their projects on the backburner or outright canceling them, some have been pivoting out of retail CBDC into wholesale CBDC-backed tokenized deposits, and some have just quietly quiet, never getting out of the research or proof-of-concept phases. Now I’ll review some of reasons why retail CBDC launches and pilots have been so underwhelming and suggest ways to achieve viability.
In many cases retail CBDCs are made redundant by payment ecosystems that are already well served by digital payment instruments, such as fast payment systems (FPSs). And as central banks navigate “knife edge” design challenges, they create retail CBDCs that offer nothing new and compelling to end users. Interest-bearing CBDCs are rejected on bank disintermediation concerns, and cash-like privacy is rejected in deference to financial integrity considerations.
In some cases of underwhelming pilots or launches, central banks skip too quickly through the development process and/or don’t involve all stakeholders. IMF (2023) recommends a five phase (“5P”) CBDC project management approach that starts with (1) preparation before moving on to (2) proof-of-concept work and (3) prototyping, followed by (4) piloting and (5) production (launch). In other cases, the infrastructure is incomplete and key partners (e.g., banks and merchants) lack incentives to support the retail CBDC.
Banks, credit unions, and merchants are slow to participate in the Sand Dollar network. The Sand Dollar was not integrated with the traditional banking system regarding merchant accounts. Customer education was inadequate, failing to show users how and why to use Sand Dollars.
The central bank was able to see all eNaira transactions, making potential users concerned. Nigeria has a large informal economy that thrives on cash. There were too few merchants and too little infrastructure. A change of the technology provider after the launch suggested that robust tech infrastructure was not in place.
Slow merchant onboarding has been a big issue as retailers are required to upgrade their POS equipment to use Jam-Dex. The central bank did not incentivize or mandate banks to modify their ATMs to accept and convert Jam-Dex.
Many central banks have prioritized building out fast payment systems, which are up and running in over 120 jurisdictions, versus just four launched retail CBDCs and five being piloted (Figures 1 and 2).[1] Although (IMF, 2025) makes a case for retail CBDC and FPS co-existence, one must wonder what incremental value retail CBDC offers users? Both provide instantaneous, efficient and potentially lower cost payments, and although FPSs transfer private liabilities that carry credit risk, deposit insurance eliminates that for most users.
Bindseil (2026) identifies several other reasons why retail CBDCs might trump FPSs, but while many of them resonate with central bankers and policymakers, I wonder how many of them do with potential users. I’ll discuss this more fully in the next post in this series.
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.
[October 22, 2025] Nigeria’s eNaira has effectively slipped into a quiet death, with official channels and infrastructure fading away even as authorities stop short of formally killing the project. The mobile apps have disappeared from major app stores, the USSD access channel no longer works, leaving users locked out or unable to complete basic actions. And the eNaira’s official website returns a “404 Web Site not found” message and the official social media presence has been silent since 2023. [Cryptonews]
Question to readers: Should the eNaira be classified as “canceled” in the CBDCTracker.org database? The story above is old, but everything it says is now current.
In a Sustainable Architecture for Finance in Europe (SAFE) working paper, Ulrich Bindseil argues that technological innovation is reshaping but not abolishing the hierarchical “layering” of money and payment ledgers, with central bank money remaining the ultimate anchor. He develops a typology of ledger layers and balance‑sheet structures, then applies it to central bank digital currency (CBDC), instant payment systems, public blockchains, tokenized multi‑asset platforms, expanded non‑bank access to central bank accounts, and stablecoins, finding that most proposals reorganize tiers rather than create a genuinely flat architecture. This matters because optimal layering balances efficiency, risk allocation, and governance: central banks should preserve singleness of money via a senior public ledger while selectively widening access and modernizing regulation to manage new operational and financial risks. The key unresolved question is how far to extend base‑layer access and programmability without undermining the advantages of a two‑tier banking system or overburdening central banks’ risk‑management role. [SAFE vis SSRN]
FYI I produce a monthly digest of digital fiat currency (DFC) developments exclusively for the official sector (e.g., central banks, ministries of finance and international financial institution (e.g., the BIS, IMF, OECD, World Bank)) plus academics and firms that are active in the DFC space (commercial banks, technology providers, consultants, etc.). (DFCs include central bank digital currency (CBDC), stablecoins and tokenized deposits.) It goes out via email on the first business day of every month, and if you’re interested in being on the mailing list, please email me at john@kiffmeister.com.