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Germany's central bank chief pushes for euro-backed stablecoins and digital euro

Europe races to reclaim financial control with a digital euro and CBDCs. Will dollar-backed stablecoins threaten the continent's monetary independence?

The image shows a chart of the euro monetary policy, with different colors representing the...
The image shows a chart of the euro monetary policy, with different colors representing the different levels of monetary policy. The chart is accompanied by text that provides further information about the policy.

German Central Bank President Supports Euro-Denominated Stablecoins

Germany's central bank chief pushes for euro-backed stablecoins and digital euro

German central bank president Joachim Nagel said he sees "merit in euro-denominated stablecoins," and argues that they could serve as a cheaper and more efficient means for cross-border payments by both firms and individuals.

During his speech at the New Year's Reception of the American Chamber of Commerce in Germany in Frankfurt, Nagel, who leads the Deutsche Bundesbank, added that the EU is "working hard on the introduction of the digital euro."

"This will be the first pan-European retail digital payment solution, based solely on European infrastructures," he added.

However, he did not elaborate on how euro-denominated stablecoins would be regulated within the European Union's existing legal framework, nor clarify how they would interact with the planned digital euro or broader monetary policy architecture.

In separate comments made last week, Nagel cautioned that if US dollar-denominated stablecoins were to gain significantly larger market share than a euro-pegged alternative, European monetary policy "could be severely impaired," and the continent's sovereignty could be weakened.

Nagel, who has long maintained a cautious and skeptical stance toward unbacked cryptocurrencies, has instead advocated the use of a state-backed digital euro, which he believes "will play a role in future resilience" for Europe.

According to him, the central bank has already "accomplished important exploratory work on the possible introduction of a wholesale CBDC." A wholesale CBDC, he said, would allow financial institutions to make "programmable payments" in central bank money.

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