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With:
| Commissioner Hester M. Pierce, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
We are in the midst of studying and discussing the potential effects of a digital dollar, a digital liability issued by the Federal Reserve, available to everyone in the United States-in other words, a retail CBDC for the United States of America.
Theoretical benefits around the idea of a CBDC include greater efficiency and redundancy in the payments ecosystem, a field for innovation, greater financial inclusion, and the potential to lay the foundations for better cross-border transactions. But not only are those benefits still to be verified, but there are also risks as well in the form of financial instability, operational, reputational, surveillance, and money laundering risks. The devil is in the details, and CBDCs are not the exception, If a digital dollar is issued, its regulation and design will be particularly responsible for its success.
Having explored CBDC motivations and challenges from an Asia-pacific, Latin American, UK and Canadian perspective, we now turn our attention to the United States. In this session, guests Commissioner Hester M. Peirce from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Professor Patrick McCarty, Adjunct Professor, Derivatives/ICOs and Cryptocurrencies at Georgetown University Law Center join FNA to offer an insight into CBDC deployment and its relationship with other digital forms of payment and benefits/implications of a national rollout from a U.S. perspective.
The session covered:
With:
| Commissioner Hester M. Pierce, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
We are in the midst of studying and discussing the potential effects of a digital dollar, a digital liability issued by the Federal Reserve, available to everyone in the United States-in other words, a retail CBDC for the United States of America.
Theoretical benefits around the idea of a CBDC include greater efficiency and redundancy in the payments ecosystem, a field for innovation, greater financial inclusion, and the potential to lay the foundations for better cross-border transactions. But not only are those benefits still to be verified, but there are also risks as well in the form of financial instability, operational, reputational, surveillance, and money laundering risks. The devil is in the details, and CBDCs are not the exception, If a digital dollar is issued, its regulation and design will be particularly responsible for its success.
Having explored CBDC motivations and challenges from an Asia-pacific, Latin American, UK and Canadian perspective, we now turn our attention to the United States. In this session, guests Commissioner Hester M. Peirce from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and Professor Patrick McCarty, Adjunct Professor, Derivatives/ICOs and Cryptocurrencies at Georgetown University Law Center join FNA to offer an insight into CBDC deployment and its relationship with other digital forms of payment and benefits/implications of a national rollout from a U.S. perspective.
The session covered: