Blockchain: Is it a hype or a hoax? 45
Table 1.2 (Continued) Potential benefits and challenges
CBDC benefits
CBDC challenges
Additional insights
Countering new digital currencies:
CDBC can provide healthy, safe
government-backed digital currencies
that can create competition against
privately issued digital currencies. It can
also provide more regulated digital
currency markets and reduce/prevent
the adoption of privately issues
currencies that may be difficult to
regulate.
Costs and risks to the central bank: central banks would have
to bear the costs of offering CBDC and could pose risks to
their reputation if there are any glitches, system failure,
instability or unavailability of the platform offering CBDC.
Offering full-fledged CBDC would require central banks to
invest and further maintain the whole digital ecosystem of
CBDC that includes DLT, front-end wallets, monitoring
transactions, governance and policies supporting cyber, KYC,
AML etc., to name a few.
I think governments need to take a
collaborative approach. The
government should have tight
regulations and establish partnerships
with tech companies, and financial
banks to run part of the CBDC
ecosystem. I also think CBDC is the
way to go forward with digital
currencies that are guaranteed by the
government like existing fiat
currencies, e.g. dollar and pound.
Support Distributed Ledger Technology
(DLT): Some central banks have a view
that the adoption of DLT-based CBDC
will proliferate the DLT-based asset
market as well. CBDC adoption will
improve the automated supply chain
further through the use of smart
contracts, cross-border payments and
digital asset transfer.
Same as the above point on establishing, maintaining, and
supporting the CBDC ecosystem by the Government.
Same point as above.
Monetary policy: Academics and
economists have a view that CDBC
adoption can enhance the transmission
of monetary policy. Monetary policies
can be quickly implemented digitally to
provide an economic response to
macroeconomic events or pandemics
like COVID-19.
Existing financial stakeholders like banks and intermediaries
need to adopt the policies. The central government also need
to take feedback from the financial market key stakeholders
before enforcing monetary policies. There can also be a risk
of political influence if the central government can enforce
the policies without taking feedback from stakeholders in the
financial industry.
There needs to be tight governance to
adopt monetary policies without any
political interference.