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Bank of England Official: It's 'Probable' UK Will Launch a Digital Currency

Sir Jon Cunliffe expressed the concern that consumers may find stablecoins more attractive than bank offerings.

Updated Sep 14, 2021, 12:55 p.m. Published May 14, 2021, 10:00 a.m.
The Royal Exchange. (QQ7/Shutterstock)

A Bank of England official has spoken of the institution's plans to launch a U.K. central bank digital currency (CBDC), now often dubbed “Britcoin.”

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In a speech Thursday, Sir Jon Cunliffe, deputy governor for financial stability, said it looks “probable” that the state would need to issue some form of digital cash to retain citizens’ confidence in the availability of public money.

“The knowledge that under stress depositors have the option to switch into state money may be important in preventing a more general loss of confidence in money,” Cunliffe said.

Such loss of confidence could see more consumers “locked into private money”, he said, citing stablecoins launched by Big Tech platforms as an example. These are likely “to have greater functionality and lower transaction costs than the current commercial bank digital money offering and could quickly attract a large number of users.”

Thus far the central bank has only published a discussion paper and announced a taskforce to explore a CBDC, so the comments are perhaps notable as a sign of intent.

In other news, Andrew Bailey, governor of the Bank of England, has warned again about investing in crypto assets, soon after bitcoin’s price took a sharp dip under $50,000.

Also read: Former CFTC Boss’ Digital Dollar Project Ready to Kick Off First US CBDC Tests

Speaking at a Bank of England citizens’ panel event Thursday, Bailey spoke of the “warning sign” of people looking for investment opportunities in crypto.

“You’ve probably seen all the stories about the price of bitcoin, share prices in the U.S. suddenly rocketing up for companies that nobody quite knows what they do,” he said.

“Buy it if you want, but it has no intrinsic value,” Bailey concluded, echoing his comments of a week ago when he told a press conference that crypto investors should be prepared to lose all their money.

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A ladder for the masses: Pakistan’s Bilal Bin Saqib says crypto is a necessity, not a luxury

PVARA chairman Bilal Bin Saqib (Consensus)

Regulation of digital assets is a great opportunity for emerging markets, said Pakistan’s crypto regulation lead.

What to know:

  • Pakistan boasts the third largest crypto market by retail activity, ahead of places like Germany and Japan.
  • “We have over 100 million unbanked citizens, people who have no saving tools, no investment tools, no way to break out of their economic class," PVARA chairman Bilal Bin Saqib said. "Hence why crypto and blockchain are not a luxury for Pakistan. It’s a ladder for the masses.”
  • On the planned BTC reserve or the national energy allocation, speed without structure can be dangerous, said Pakistan’s crypto regs czar.