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Fed's Brainard Says US Can't Not Have a CBDC in a World in Which Others Have Them
Brainard said without a digital dollar the proliferation of stablecoins could fragment the payment system.
Updated Sep 14, 2021, 1:33 p.m. Published Jul 31, 2021, 10:38 p.m.

Chief among the reasons the U.S. needs to have a digital dollar is that other countries are racing to issue their own central bank digital currencies (CBDC), Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard said on Friday, Reuters reported.
- Speaking at the Aspen Institute Economic Strategy Group, Brainard said, "The dollar is very dominant in international payments, and if you have the other major jurisdictions in the world with a digital currency, a CBDC offering, and the U.S. doesn't have one, I just, I can't wrap my head around that," according to the Reuters report.
- Earlier this month, Fed Chair Jerome Powell told a House committee a Fed report on CBDCs would come in early September as the central bank decides on the merits of issuing a digital dollar. Meanwhile, China is in the testing stage of its own CBDC.
- Closer to home, Brainard said the proliferation of stablecoins could fragment the payment system without a digital dollar, according to the report.
- A digital dollar could also help people without bank accounts to get government aid such as coronavirus pandemic relief payments, Reuters quoted the Fed governor as saying.
- Separately, Brainard said she doesn't see any signs that currently high inflation readings are pushing longer-term inflation expectations above the central bank's 2% target.
Read more: Jerome Powell: CBDC Report Coming in Early September
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Crypto PAC Fairshake leaps into first midterm Senate race with $5 million in Alabama

The industry's leading campaign-finance operation is getting behind a pro-crypto candidate, Barry Moore, in Alabama's Republican Senate primary.
What to know:
- The crypto industry's campaign-finance arm is flexing with an opening $5 million for a Republican Senate primary election in Alabama as the congressional midterms — still nine months away — begin in earnest.
- Fairshake and its affiliate political action committees say they've got $193 million to spend, so far, which dwarfs most industry PACs and even some of the largest funds directly serving the political parties.
- Alabama congressman Barry Moore will receive supportive advertising with this money, and a Fairshake representative said the group has also dedicated funds to back Representative French Hill, the chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.
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