HomeNewsOpinionThe digital Euro endures even as crypto FOMO fades

The digital Euro endures even as crypto FOMO fades

When technocrats attempt moonshots, misfiring is a real risk

July 05, 2023 / 14:54 IST
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Euro
If the physical euro required a grand bargain between Francois Mitterrand and Helmut Kohl to take off, maybe its digital version also needs a less technocratic touch.

The digital euro, like a lot of central bank proposals to issue virtual cash, has so far existed in a policy sweet spot: maximum imagination, minimal execution. Dreaming up tokens, wallets or ledgers that may future-proof fiat against the next Bitcoin or stablecoin is easier and cheaper than doing it for real.

As deadlines loom for a shift from pumping out jargon-filled white papers into an actual decision on whether to go ahead, however, feet are shuffling awkwardly as big risks hover into view.

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A string of bank failures in the US — in which cryptocurrency played a part — and the downfall of Credit Suisse Group AG have attuned central bankers to the dangers of tinkering with a financial system where depositors are increasingly flighty. Throwing a digital euro into the banking system, for example, could suck deposits away; one study found that even a small take-up of €2,000 ($2,180) per household could rob smaller banks of more than 10 percent of their deposits.

The risk of a public backlash is also rising, fed both by conspiracy theories of Orwellian control but also the undeniable truth that an online digital euro will be less private than cash. Surveys suggest consumers aren’t keen on central banks accessing personal payments data.