ECB execs respond to banks’ objections to digital euro, suggest priorities

The European Central Bank (ECB) has been producing plenty of informational material about the digital euro lately, much of it in the form of brochures, FAQs and other accessible formats. As they do so, the bankers’ frustration with overblown fears and the cold reception the innovation has been given are beginning to show.

ECB executives, including board member Piero Cipollone, published a column in two versions on Feb. 19 addressing issues of bank intermediation. Specifically, they discuss banks’ perceived confusion about disintermediation potentially resulting from the introduction of a euro central bank digital currency (CBDC):

The authors briefly describe on the ECB blog several measures designed for the digital euro to prevent mass transfers of money from commercial bank accounts into digital euro wallets. These design elements encourage the use of the digital euro for payments rather than investment, and the authors pointed out that banks could compete to retain deposits by raising their interest rates.

The authors provide counterarguments to claims that introducing the digital euro could cause an acute economy-wide banking crisis and that banks risk losing deposits as a source of refinancing in the long term.

Related: Adopting CBDC could destabilize banks, help households, US Treasury study says

Their argument about banknotes may be somewhat more original. “Persistent complaints regarding future volumes of digital euro in studies sponsored by the banking system are not looking at the right variable (which is central bank money in circulation),” they wrote.

Furthermore, central banks are not the biggest threat to the banking industry:

By concentrating on the perceived shortcomings of CBDC, banks “ignore the many other challenges they need to address to ensure stable funding through deposits,” the authors conclude.

A longer, more technical version of the blog post can be found on the VoxEU website.

Here we go…ECB trying to sell us a programmable centralised currency with the potential to convert us into economic slaves. Initially, of course it will just be a cool app to make our life easier. But if citizens buy into this, they are sowing the seeds of their own enslavement.— David Thunder (@davidjthunder) February 19, 2024

ECB president Christine Lagarde referred in a speech before a European Parliament committee in September to “the conspiracy theory that abounds about this as if, you know, Big Brother was going to suddenly determine what you buy when you buy it and how restricted it should be.”

The ECB announced in October that it was moving into the preparation phase of the digital euro project.

Cipollone’s co-authors, Ulrich Bindseil and Jürgen Schaaf, published a blog post on the ECB website in November 2022 called “Bitcoin’s Last Stand.”

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