20% Of The World Could Have Digital Cash In Three Years: BIS
20% Of The World Could Have Digital Cash In Three Years: BIS
BY TYLER DURDEN WEDNESDAY, JAN 27, 2021 - 21:57
While most traders and finance pros are distracted by the
ongoing war between Wall Street and Wall Street Bets which sparked market moves
and short squeezes which until last week were viewed as unthinkable, we should
remember that for all its entertainment value the crusade of a few millions
GenZers is a sideshow which can be shut down with the flick of a switch.
Indeed, tonight's main event, which saw the most heavily shorted
stocks tumble the moment the
r/WallStreetBets subreddit went dark (or rather
"private") only to rebound once the forum reemerged, demonstrated
just how easy it is for both Silicon Valley and Wall Street to silence these
upstart voices and return to market to "normal." And all they have to
do is to claim that there is "hate speech" on the forum - a truly
shocking discovery within the testosterone-heavy world of male traders - as
Discord did when it shut down the WSB server earlier today.
In any case, while we all keep an eye on what Gamestop does
next, we should always remember that the people in charge are those that print
the money, namely the world's central banks. And today, in all the chaos
surrounding the latest most shorted meltups, there was some critical news which
most missed yet which will have far greater consequences on the future of the
world then where GME closes tomorrow.
According to a survey conducted by the central banks' central
bank, the Basel-based Bank for International Settlements (profiled in "Meet The Secretive
Group That Runs The World"), central banks representing one-fifth of
the world’s population are likely to issue their own digital currencies in the
next three years.
The push for digital currencies - which as we -
and DoubleLine -
explained last year is the final move in the radical overhaul to the
established monetary system and which will unleash far higher inflation - comes
as authorities look to fend off the threat to their money-printing powers from
bitcoin and efforts linked to Big Tech such as the Facebook-backed Diem,
formerly Libra. In fact, just today, Agustin Carstens, the general manager of the
BIS - condemned
bitcoin as "a combination of a bubble, a Ponzi scheme and
an environmental disaster" and said it was "piggybacking" on mainstream
institutions and becoming a "threat to financial stability", an
attempt to demonize Bitcoin as if it is somehow worse than central banking
itself.
At the same time, central banks who have taken interest rates
negative are looking at whether digital cash could be used to help implement
the radical policy. Because in a world with trillions in paper money, the
easiest way to circumvent punitive interest rates is simply to hold cash in
one's safe. Digital currencies would promptly do away with that.
As Reuters reports, Wednesday’s BIS survey of 65 central banks showed
86% were exploring the benefits and drawbacks of digital currencies, with
some testing possible designs. Translation: we are just years away from global
implementation.
nd while the survey showed that emerging and developing economy central banks are more likely than those in major economies to issue central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), the reality is that it is precisely the developed nations whose central banks are desperate for "blockchained" control over currency in circulation, and its digitalization, especially when another massive stimulus has to be unleashed. As we explained previously, such a digital deposit of dollars - which would circumvent the Treasury (and Congress) - by the Fed, is precisely what central banks hope to enact after the next financial crisis in order to spark a reflationary wave.
Indeed, as the survey also showed a number of bigger countries
have also been testing the waters, with China the most advanced.
A fifth of central banks from major economies that responded to
the survey said issuing digital currencies was “possible” in the short or
medium term, up from only one last year. Expect this number to rise to 100% in
the coming months.
Meanwhile, as we reported last year, the People’s Bank of China expanded a trial of a digital renminbi to its three largest urban regions, which together contain 400 million people, in August. ECB President Christine Lagarde said last week her bank was pushing on with its work on a digital euro, Sweden’s E-Krona is progressing and even Jerome Powell has said the Fed is carrying out experiments for a digital dollar.
To be sure, there are still hurdles to overcome, first and
foremost the widespread resistance that would emerge once central banks declare
paper currency void.
The BIS survey also showed that over a quarter of central banks
do not currently have the authority to issue a CBDC and about 48% remain
unsure, although both those numbers can easily move higher if the need was
there. Separately, around 60% of banks see themselves as unlikely to issue any
type of digital currency in the short or medium-term.
As a whole, though, “central banks are moving into more advanced
stages of CBDC engagement, progressing from conceptual research to practical
experimentation,” the survey said.
And while we wait for the catalyst that moves the global economy into a digital payment format, last October the Bahamas became the first country to launch a general purpose CBDC, known as the Sand Dollar. Many others will follow suit.
https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/20-world-could-have-digital-cash-three-years-bis
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