Fed Partners With MIT Based Digital Currency Initiative To Explore Central Bank Digital Currency
Two events took place on August 13. One was a speech from Lael Brainard at the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco's Innovation Office Hours. The other was the publication of a paper in the FEDS notes series on “Comparing Means of Payment: What Role for a Central Bank Digital Currency?”. It is no coincidence that both events happened on the same day. The Federal Reserve Bank (FRB) wants to communicate that it takes CBDCs seriously and is engaged in efforts to research a path toward implementation.
The Fed’s primary purpose is to ensure the
financial stability of the US in the service of its citizens. It has been an
open secret that the FED had been working on researching CBDC. They were in
stealth mode. Some indications came up during the House Finance Committee
hearings on June 17. Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell made it clear that
as CBDC is an extremely important part of the national infrastructure and under
the purview of the Fed, the Fed would be in charge of the core infrastructure
of CBDC.
The latest news reveal how the Fed has gone
about researching and testing technologies to support a CBDC. The speech gives
broad strategic direction while the note is more narrowly focused on the
rationale for a central bank digital currency.
Dr. Brainard is a member of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve. As the chair of the Committee on Payments,
Clearing and Settlements, she is the leader on CBDC research at the Fed.
Brainard is also prominent in the FedNow project, which is housed at the Boston
Fed.
Central Bank Digital Currency will
complement cash, not replace it entirely. This was one of the central messages
of the speech. CBDCs present opportunities but also risks. Risks in the form of
privacy, enhanced illicit activity and financial stability. An impetus for the
Fed’s efforts is the possibility of widespread global adoption of Libra, which
can threaten the Fed’s control of monetary policy. Digital Currency Electronic
Payments (DCEP) from China is much further ahead in terms of implementation.
DCEP and Chinese international strategy threatens the primacy of the dollar as
the international unit of account and means of payment.
Dr. Brainard also laid out the steps taken
by the Fed to research and study CBDCs in this environment. A technology lab
(TechLab) was established by the Federal Reserve Board (FRB)to build and test
distributed ledger based solutions for CBDCs . The TechLab is a
multidisciplinary team consisting of technologists from the Federal Reserve
Banks of Cleveland, Dallas and New York supporting a policy team studying the
monetary policy, financial stability and payments infrastructure through the
lens of the Fed’s primary purpose.
Dr. Brainard announced a partnership with
MIT Digital Currency Initiative (DCI) with the Boston Fed taking the lead as
the liaison with DCI. The multi-year partnership is aimed at building and
testing a hypothetical CBDC. This research project will result in the open
publication of results as well as the release of the resulting code base into
open source.
Researching the publications and activities
from the DCI is one way to get a good idea about the possible direction of the
DCI-Fed collaboration. One of the prominent DCI researchers is an co-inventor
and implementer of Lightning, the layer 2 bitcoin protocol. A response to the Bank
of England’s blockchain paper published by the DCI contains multiple references
to layer 2. Hence, layer 2 is expected to figure conspicuously in the CBDC
research conducted by the DCI. However in light of the Federal Reserve Act,
there may be legal tender limitations on CBDCs, especially the layer 2 part of
the solution. The Federal Reserve Act is more than a hundred years old.
A job posting on the DCI site for a CBDC
developer asks for expertise in C/C++, Go and Rust. Go is the language used in
Go-Ethereum as well as in Hyperledger Fabric. C/C++ is used in bitcoin core.
Rust is heavily used in Libra as well as in modern cryptographic library
development. Thus this job posting offers some hints on what blockchains are
being examined as part of the collaboration.
All indications, including associated interviews with the DCI and Boston Fed personnel point to a multi-year, multi-blockchain testing effort in the CBDC context. However, it does not seem like the DCI will be building their own blockchain. Only time will tell.
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