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BIS says cooperation between public and private sectors would be vital for a global CBDC system.

CBDCs can transform finance and banking as we know them today, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has stated in its
CBDCs can transform finance and banking as we know them today, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has stated in its latest report.

The Bank for International Settlements (BIS) continues investigating the development of the global central bank digital currency (CBDC), publishing a new joint report with seven central banks. Released Sept. 30, BIS’ latest CBDC report refers to joint efforts to explore a retail CBDC alongside the Bank of Canada, the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank, the United States Federal Reserve, Sveriges Riksbank, and the Swiss National Bank.

The report provides an executive summary of investigation progress made since publishing a report in October 2020, which pointed out common foundational principles and core features of a CBDC. The BIS also published three detailed CBDC reports related to CBDC system design and interoperability, user needs, adoption, and financial stability implications. According to the new report, an effective CBDC system would “need to involve both public and private actors to ensure interoperability and coexistence with the broader payment system.”

The public and private systems need to be in balance for CBDC to work.

The central banks participating in the report agreed that any CBDC ecosystem would involve the public and private sectors in a balance to provide “desired policy outcome and enable innovation that meets users’ evolving payment needs.” The ability to bridge between CBDCs and traditional payment systems would be crucial for the financial system. The report stated: “Yet a theme that cuts through almost every consideration is interoperability. Domestic interoperability would be key to ensuring a CBDC system coexists with other national payment systems and contributes to broader accessibility, resilience, and diversity.”

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