The digital pound: A new form of money for households and businesses?
The Bank of England (BoE) and HM Treasury launched a digital pound central bank digital currency (CBDC) consultation. Both want to ensure the public have access to safe money that is convenient to use as everyday lives become more digital, while supporting private sector innovation, choice and efficiency in digital payments. At this stage, they judge it likely that the digital pound will be needed, but a decision to go ahead won’t be taken until around the middle of the decade, and it wouldn’t be launched until the second half of the decade. Alongside the consultation paper, the BoE published a technology working paper on its CBDC technology thinking. [Read more at the BoE]
According to Governor Jon Cunliffe, the Bank of England would provide the digital pound and the central infrastructure, including the ‘core ledger’. Private sector firms – which could be banks or approved non-bank firms – would provide the interface between the Bank’s central infrastructure and users by offering wallets and payment services. These private companies would be able to integrate the digital pound, as the settlement asset, into the services they would offer to wallet holders. The wallets would be operated on a ‘pass-through’ basis. That is to say, they would not constitute a claim on the wallet provider in the way that a bank account is a claim on a bank. Nor would they represent a custody arrangement. Rather, the wallets would hold all of the customer related information and ‘pass-through’ the customers instructions to the Bank’s infrastructure. All of the digital pounds would be held on the Bank’s central ledger.
The Bank is proposing a limit of between £10,000 and £20,000 per individual as the appropriate balance between managing risks and supporting wide usability of the digital pound. The Technology Working Paper accompanying the Consultation Paper sets out an illustrative and complementary conceptual model consisting of a core ledger, API layer, analytics and alias service. The core ledger operated by the Bank might be centralised, running as a traditional database, or it might use Distributed Ledger Technology (whether a blockchain or another form of the technology).
Laos to launch CBDC proof of concept with Soramitsu
Japanese software developer Soramitsu said the Bank of the Lao is launching a Digital Lao Kip (DLak) CBDC proof of concept. Soramitsu was responsible for developing the Bank of Cambodia’s Project Bakong blockchain-based payment system that has been incorrectly referred to as a CBDC system. This Bank of the Lao project looks like a CBDC platform (see figure below). [Read more at Soramitsu]
Cash or cashless? How people pay
European Central Bank (ECB) blog post by Ulrich Bindseil and Doris Schneeberger discusses findings from a recent ECB consumer survey and what they mean for the future of cash and digital means of payment. “Despite the preference for cashless payments, 60% of euro area consumers state that they value having the option to pay in cash. This shows that people appreciate having a choice when it comes to how they pay. Their decision may then depend on the particular situation or purchase.” The post made it clear that “as cash remains widely used and valued, [the ECB is] committed to maintaining euro cash and will continue to make sure it is available. [Read more at the ECB]
Upcoming conferences, webinars and speaking engagements:
- I’ll be moderating a panel on “what happens when the lights go out…different schemes for offline functionality” at the in-person Digital Currency Conference (DCC) in Mexico City on May 18. [Register here]
Kiffmeister’s global central bank digital currency monthly monitor
Just a reminder that I produce a monthly digest of central bank digital currency (CBDC) developments exclusively for the official sector. So for any of you out there who work for a central bank, ministry of finance or international financial institution who would like to receive it by email on the first business day of every month, please DM me on LinkedIn or email me at chronicles@kiffmeister.com.
The Sovereign Official Digital Association (SODA) is a technology-agnostic firm offering advisory services at the intersection of central banking, digital finance and the web3 industry, aiming to make public digital money a reality. SODA believes institutions in the existing financial ecosystem should have access to the tools and resources they need to move from discussion to action. SODA offers ‘real life’ use cases to help test digital money and drive adoption as central banks and other public institutions explore the future of a more financially inclusive world powered by interoperable blockchain-based networks. SODA would love you to join us on this journey – please get in touch (chris@sodapublicmoney.org).
Satoshi Capital Advisors is a New York-based, global advisory firm that works with central banks, governments, and the private sector to architect, implement, and operate varying initiatives. Satoshi Capital Advisors’ central bank work revolves around CBDC architecture and implementation, providing advisory services from research phase through to growth phase. Utilizing a product-market fit and technology agnostic approach to CBDC architecture and implementation enables Satoshi Capital Advisors to build tailored solutions, bespoke to local financial system nuances. Satoshi Capital Advisors welcomes requests from central bank officials for virtual and in-person CBDC workshops. [Click here for more information]
WhisperCash offers the first fully offline digital currency platform that has the same properties as physical cash. It can perform secure consecutive offline payments without compromising on security, privacy or accessibility. WhisperCash allows direct person to person offline payments without any server infrastructure or internet connectivity. It comes in various form factors including the self-contained credit card-sized “Pro” that sports an eInk screen and capacitive keyboard, and lasts for two weeks between recharges assuming a few transactions per day. [Click here for more information]



