A CBDC Could Allow Governments to Put Permissions on What You Buy

Written by thesociable | Published 2023/05/27
Tech Story Tags: central-bank | cbdc | european | euro | good-company | eu | central-bank-digital-currency | hackernoon-top-story

TLDRThe European Central Bank (ECB) puts out a call to digital identity experts to participate in a workstream that will contribute to its digital euro rulebook. The ECBā€™s investigation phase into the digital euro began in October, 2021. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is also in the process of creating a CBDCĀ handbook to assist central banks and governments.via the TL;DR App

A CBDC linked with digital identity could allow governments & corporations to put permissions on what you can buy with your own money, including when & where you can spend it: perspective

The European Central Bank (ECB) puts out a call to digital identity experts to participate in a workstream that will contribute to its digital euro rulebook for the proposed Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC).

Participants in theĀ ECBā€™s workstreamĀ ā€œare expected to be leading experts in strong customer authentication (SCA) and identification, including digital identity initiatives, preferably with experience in related regulatory technical standards on SCA and in implementing customer identity and access management solutions.ā€

Potential candidates are required to respond to the following:

  1. Provide a proposal for the best possible user experience for the digital euro with regard to identification and authentication in the use cases it covers.
  2. What existing standards/regulations do you think the digital euro should refer to and/or build on for (i) identification and (ii) authentication?
  3. Do you think that some of these standards/regulations would need to be adapted to accommodate the digital euro? If so, to what extent? (Please distinguish between identification/onboarding and authentication in your answer.)
  4. How do you envisage a potential link between the digital euro identification and authentication mechanisms and potential upcoming digital identity initiatives?

According to the ECB, the main objective of the workstream ā€œisĀ to suggest identification and authentication requirements for the digital euroā€ while the workstream itselfĀ ā€œwill contribute to the ā€˜Functional and operational modelā€™ section of the digital euro rulebook.ā€

The ECBā€™s investigation phase into the digital euroĀ began in October, 2021Ā and is set to conclude in October, 2023 when the central bank ā€œwill decide whether to start the process of actually developing it.ā€

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is also in the process of creating a CBDCĀ handbook to assist central banks and governmentsĀ throughout the world in their CBDC rollouts.

Published publicly on April 10, the ā€œIMF Approach to Central Bank Digital Currency Capacity Developmentā€Ā reportĀ outlines the IMFā€™s multi-year strategy for aiding CBDC rollouts, including the development of a living ā€œCBDC Handbookā€ for monetary authorities to follow.

Chapter 11 ā€œwill consider the tradeoff between data use and privacy protection,ā€ including ā€œwhat data are generated by CBDC transactions and which institutions might have access to it.ā€

This data will inextricably be linked to a userā€™sĀ digital identity.

ā€œThis digital identity,ā€ according to the World Economic Forum (WEF),Ā ā€œdetermines what products, services and information we can access ā€“ or, conversely, what is closed off to us.ā€

According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS)Ā Annual Economic Report 2021:

ā€œIdentification at some level is hence central in the design of CBDCs. This calls for a CBDC that is account-based and ultimately tied to a digital identity.ā€

Additionally,Ā ā€œThe most promising way of providing central bank money in the digital age is an account-based CBDC built on digital ID with official sector involvement.ā€

Speaking at theĀ BIS Innovation SummitĀ in March, 2023, ECB president Christine Lagarde said that a digital euro would not be as anonymous or as private as cash.

ā€œIs it [digital euro] going to be as private as cash? No,ā€ she said.

ā€œA digital currency will never be as anonymous and as protecting of privacy in many respects as cash, which is why cash will always be around [ā€¦]A digital currency is an alternative, is another means of payment and will not provide exactly the same level of privacy and anonymity as cash, but will be pretty close in terms of complete neutrality in relation to the data.ā€

Lagarde also told her fellow panelists that central banks would not be in charge of programming a digital currency, but that commercial banks certainly would.

ā€œFor us [central banks], the issuance of a digital currency that would be central bank money would not be programmableĀ ā€” would not be associated with any particular limitation, whether itā€™s in time, in type of use ā€”Ā that to me would be a voucher. It wouldnā€™t be a digital currency,ā€ said Lagarde.

ā€œThose who can associate the use of digital currency with programmability would be the intermediaries ā€” would be the commercial banks.ā€

CDBCs run the risk of having every transaction recorded while beingĀ fully programmable, which means financial institutions and their customers could have total control over where, when, and how your money is spent.

Bank of Russia deputy governor Alexey ZabotkinĀ gave a real world example of what CBDC programmability could look like when he spoke at the annual cybersecurity training exerciseĀ Cyber PolygonĀ back in 2021.

There, Zabotkin explained:

ā€œThis [digital ruble] will permit better traceability of payments and money flow, and alsoĀ explore the possibility of setting conditions on permitted terms of use of a given unit of currency.

ā€œJust imagine thatĀ you are able to give your kids some money in digital rubles and then restrict their use for purchaseĀ of junk food, for example.

ā€œThat would be a useful functionality for a customer, and of courseĀ you can come up with hundreds of other similar use cases.ā€

Speaking atĀ a high-level roundtableĀ on CBDC in Washington, DC in October 2022, IMF deputy managing director and former Peopleā€™s Bank of China (PBoC) deputy governorĀ Bo LiĀ said of CBDC programmability:

ā€œCBDC can allow government agencies and private sector players to program ā€” to create smart contracts ā€” to allow targeted policy functions. For example, welfare payment; for example, consumption coupons; for example, food stamps.ā€

ā€œBy programming CBDC, those [sic] money can be precisely targeted for what kind of people can own and what kind of use this money can be utilized,ā€ he added.

Last month, Indiaā€™s digital ID architectĀ Nandan Nilekani told the IMFĀ that everybody should have a digital ID, a bank account, and a smartphone as they were the ā€œtools of the New Worldā€ for digital public infrastructure.

ā€œIf you think, ā€˜what are the tools of the New World?ā€˜Ā ā€”Ā Everybody should have a digital ID; everybody should have a bank account; everybody should have a smartphone,ā€ said Nilekani.

ā€œThen, anything can be done. Everything else is built on that.ā€

India, too, is launching a CBDC pilot program that is exploring different use cases, such asĀ setting expiry dates.

According to the Reserve Bank of India, ā€œCBDCs have the possibility of programming the money by tying the end use.ā€

When it comes to retail transactions, CBDC ā€œtokens may have an expiry date, by which they would need to be spent, thus ensuring consumption.ā€

Ultimately, a CBDC linked with digital identity could allow governments and corporations to put permissions on what you can buy with your own money,Ā including expiry datesĀ on when you can spend it.

The ECB claims that it will not make a decision on whether or not it will actually go through with developing the CBDC until October of this year.

After all the time, energy, and resources invested in exploring the digital euro, do you really believe the European Central Bank would just walk away and abandon it?


This article was originally published by Tim Hinchliffe on The Sociable.


Written by thesociable | The Sociable is a technology news publication that picks apart how technology transforms society and vice versa.
Published by HackerNoon on 2023/05/27