236x Filetype PPTX File size 2.46 MB Source: thedocs.worldbank.org
Jurisdictions Where Retail CBDC Is Being Explored (as of November 26, 2021) Where central banks have launched or piloted (or soon will) Bahamas (launched) Eastern Caribbean (launched) Nigeria (pilot launched) China (pilot launched) Jamaica (pilot launch imminent) Uruguay (pilot completed) Where central banks have done proofs of concepts (or soon will) Bhutan (proof of concept planned) Ghana (update) Sweden (proof of concept underway) Japan (proof of concept started) Korea (proof of concept started) Ukraine (proof of concept done) Where central banks are in advanced stages of research and development Canada (update) Norway United Kingdom Euro Area Russia (latest report)(update) United States Mauritius (update) Thailand Where central banks are still in the exploratory stages (with year of last update) Australia (2021) Iceland (2018) Pakistan (2021) Brazil (2021)(update, 2021) India (2021)(update; 2021) Peru (2019)(update; 2021) Chile (2021) Indonesia (2020)(update; 2021) Philippines (2020) Curaçao en Sint Maarten (2019) Israel (2021)(update; 2021) Singapore (2021) Czech Republic (2021) Kazakhstan (2021) South Africa (2021) Denmark (2017) Kenya (2020) Switzerland (2019) Eswatini (2020) Kuwait (2019) Taiwan (2020) Georgia (2021)(update; 2021) Madagascar (2021) Trinidad and Tobago (2021) Haiti (Bitkòb) (2021) Malaysia (2021) Tunisia (2018) Hong Kong SAR (2021) Morocco (2019)(update; 2021) Turkey (2021) Hungary (2021) New Zealand (2021) Where central banks have explored or are exploring issuing retail CBDC (according to reputable news sources) Bahrain (2018) Laos (2021) Tanzania (2021) Egypt (2018) Lebanon (2020) United Arab Emirates (2021) Guatemala (2021) Macau (2021) Vietnam (2021) Honduras (2021) Palestine (2021) Iran (2018) Rwanda (2021) Where central banks have launched and discontinued Ecuador (2014-2018) Finland (1992-2006) Palau Developing a “GovCoin”! The Republic of Palau has partnered with Ripple to develop a U.S. dollar-backed digital currency for the country using the XRP Ledger. If launched, it could be the world’s first government-based national stablecoin (GovCoin). (The Pacific island nation has no central bank and uses the U.S. dollar as its official currency, so a central bank digital currency (CBDC) is out of the question.) Comparison of Advanced Retail CBDC Explorers Jurisdiction Status Date of Objectives Offline Technology provider (Project name) launch payments (Technology) The Bahamas 2020 Payment system efficiency and NZIA Limited (Sand Dollar) Fully Launched (October) resilience, financial inclusion, fighting ✘ (NZIA Cortex DLT) illicit activities Eastern Caribbean Pilot launched (in 4 Bitt Currency Union of the 8 member 2021 Reducing the costs/risks of physical ✘ (Hyperledger Fabric (DCash) countries of the (March) cash management, financial inclusion DLT) currency union) China Pilot launched 2020 Monetary sovereignty, reducing monopoly (e-CNY) (selected (April) distortions, payment system resilience, ✓ Proprietary participants) financial inclusion Uruguay Pilot conducted (6- 2017 Reducing the costs/risks of physical cash Roberto Giori (e-Peso) month pilot in 2017- (November) management, digitalization, fighting illicit ✘ Company 2018) activities Monetary sovereignty, reducing costs and risks of physical cash management, Bitt Nigeria Pilot launched 2021 financial inclusion, payment system ✘ (eNaira) (October) (HyperLedger Fabric resilience, G2P payments, tax collection, DLT) cross-border payments Jamaica 2021 Reducing the costs/risks of physical cash eCurrency (DSC3 (?) Pilot launch imminent (November?) management, financial inclusion ✘ Digital Bearer Instrument) Single- vs Multi-Tier Operating Model Source: Auer and Boehme. 2021. "Central bank digital currency: the quest for minimally invasive technology." Compliance with FATF AML/CFT Standards Holding/Transaction Limit Structures Data Access Central Bank of the Physical/email address, phone number and photo for Transaction transparency to enable central bank (CB) to monitor suspicious Bahamas Sand Dollar low-limit access (B$500 holding and B$1,500/month transactions and stop accounts. Pseudonyms ensure user anonymity. CB transaction). Plus, government-issued photo ID for maintains ledger and server is encrypted. higher limits (B$8,000 holding and B$10,000/month). Eastern Caribbean Physical/email address, phone number, photo and birth CB can see anonymized transaction data and outstanding CBDC in each Central Bank DCash date/place for low limit access (EC$1,000 to digital wallet. Registered financial institutions can fully observe the identity EC$2,700/month transaction depending on risk profile). of payers and payees and the purpose of transactions. Plus, full name and bank account for higher limits (EC$3,000 to EC$20,000/day). Central Bank of Physical/email address, SIM card and national ID for low User data is segregated across different databases. Transaction data per Uruguay e-Peso limit access (UYU30,000). No higher limits except for (anonymous) digital wallet can be decrypted to reveal the user’s identity businesses (UYU200,000). under very restrictive conditions – e.g., a competent authority prosecuting someone that has probable cause to access the transaction data. Central Bank of Physical/email address, phone number, passport photo and birth ? Nigeria eNaira date/place for low limit access (N120,000 holding and N20,000/day). Plus, National Identity Number and bank account for higher limits (N50,000 – N1,000,000/day and N300,000 – N5,000,000 holding). No limits on businesses. People’s Bank of SIM card for low limit access (¥10,000 holding, Controllable anonymity: The CB will be privy to the identity of its users as China eCNY ¥2,000/transaction and ¥5,000/day). Plus, full name, they are required to provide their real identities when they first sign up. address, phone number and bank account for higher However, users will have the ability to control what information they limits (¥500,000 holding, ¥50,000/transaction and expose to counterparties ¥100,000/day). Bank of Jamaica CBDC transactions will be subject to the existing risk- The CB does not maintain data on users. Wallet providers maintain the based AML/CFT PSP framework, including collecting identities of their respective users and transactions in line with KYC full know-your-customer (KYC) information on all holders regulations. .
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