FOMC member Robert Kaplan believes the Fed should prioritize creating a digital dollar.
Image courtesy of CoinTelegraph
President of the Dallas Federal Reserve Robert Kaplan believes the US central bank should begin work on a digital currency immediately, a clear indicator that some policymakers view this as an urgent matter.
Speaking Tuesday at a virtual conference hosted by Bloomberg, Kaplan reportedly said:
“It is critical that the Fed focuses on developing a digital currency in the coming months and years.”
The central banker’s remarks were part of a broader discussion on the economy and fiscal policy.
Kaplan is a member of this year’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the organization tasked with setting monetary policy. The 2020 Committee slashed interest rates to record lows in March as part of a synchronized policy response to Covid-19. Kaplan and the rest of the FOMC have been instrumental in flooding the market with liquidity since Sept 2019, when irregularities in the overnight repo market caused short-term interest rates to spike.
Blockchain technology is certainly on policymakers’ radar. Last month, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said that 80% of central banks around the world are exploring the potential utility of a CBDC. While the Fed has given no indication of whether it will pursue a digital dollar, it has deployed economists to explore the subject in greater detail.
On Monday, the Fed released a literature review of central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, to explore the impact of a digital dollar on commercial banking and monetary policy. The review concluded by recommending additional research be devoted to exploring the “intrinsic” value drivers of a government digital currency.
Back in August, the central bank released a full-length research report comparing a digital dollar with other payment methods.
Although the idea of a CBDC is scoffed at by proponents of truly decentralized digital currencies like Bitcoin, the digital dollar is believed by some to be the natural progression of a cashless society. It may assist governments in supporting financial innovation, boosting payment functionalities and supporting greater financial integration worldwide.
Original article posted on the CoinTelegraph.com site, by Sam Bourgi.
Article re-posted on Markethive by Jeffrey Sloe