Bank of Uganda Publishes Short List of Potential CBDC Consultants (BOU)
[May 26, 2026] The Bank of Uganda (BOU) published its expressions of interest short list of sixteen consultants to conduct a comprehensive feasibility study on issuing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) in Uganda. The contract will cover technical infrastructure, legal and regulatory aspects, economic and social impacts, operational viability, and a detailed cost-benefit analysis using both quantitative and qualitative methods. The selected firm will assess national digital and payments infrastructure, propose and apply a robust methodology, and deliver specified reports demonstrating understanding, relevant experience, and a workplan. The usual suspects (G+F, eCurrency and Soramitsu, all CBDC platform vendors) are at the top of the scoreboard. [BOU]
The Fragility of Perfectly Safe Digital Money (FRB)
The U.S. Federal Reserve (FRB) published a paper by Klee, Lubis, Ross, Ross, and Vardoulakis that shows how permissionless blockchain-based stablecoins are made fragile and prone to self-reinforcing redemption runs by way that they “unbundle” trust. Network externalities and congestion-sensitive gas fees interact to generate strategic complementarities in redemption decisions, producing runs even when reserves are perfectly safe. The global games model yields a discrete redemption regime shift, not a smooth response, once congestion crosses a threshold falling as network externalities weaken. Panel regressions on five Ethereum stablecoins (2017–2025) show congestion alone does not drive redemptions; only its interaction with low network externalities does, concentrated in the upper tail of the congestion distribution. Hence, frameworks targeting reserve quality, such as the GENIUS Act and MiCA, address the liability but not the rail, and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and tokenized deposits circulating on permissionless blockchains inherit the same fragility. [FRB]
BTW if you want to see a complete database of my DFC-related posts going back years, including many that didn’t make the Daily Digest cut, click here.
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.
