The United Kingdom is not ready to issue a central bank digital currency (CBDC) just yet as the Bank of England (BoE) doesn’t have enough expertise at the moment, according to a deputy governor.
There is more than a 50% chance that the central bank of the United Kingdom would issue a CBDC, but the regulator doesn’t have the technical skills to issue a digital currency yet, BoE deputy governor Jon Cunliffe declared at the Treasury select committee hearing on Feb. 28.
Cunliffe said that the BoE expects to get the necessary expertise to move forward with the CBDC development in the next phase as the central bank is planning to test a potential digital pound with private sector partners.
“But to move to the next stage, which would be to build a working prototype, to test in a simulated environment and then you'd be into testing in a live environment, then implementation. This next phase is designed to put us in a position to do that,” the deputy governor stated.
Cunliffe stressed that the design and structure of a potential digital pound would vary greatly depending on the motivation of the CBDC. BoE’s basic motivation here would likely be providing digital cash, or the digital equivalent of BoE notes, for “general payment purposes,” he said, adding:
The deputy governor also highlighted some potential CBDC functions and benefits that are currently not present in the existing financial system.
Related: UK is ‘likely’ to need digital currency, says BoE and Treasury: Report
Comparing a potential digital pound with iPhone’s App Store, Cunliffe said that a CBDC is about “opening a new frontier for people to improve payments and the way in which money is used.” He mentioned micropayments as a major potential use case for a
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