BSP to launch digital currency by 2029
Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas

BSP to launch digital currency by 2029

Jul 25, 2024, 3:25 AM
Rose De La Cruz

Rose De La Cruz

Writer/Columnist

The Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) said it is on track with the study and testing of its central bank digital currency – the first in the world – which it estimates to be ready for adoption in late 2029.

“We’re already about to conclude proof of concept. This is an innovative payment instrument. In fact, there’s no central bank in the world that has already launched wholesale CBDC, I guess with the exception of the Swiss National Bank,” BSP Deputy Governor Mamerto Tangonan said in a briefing Tuesday, July 23.

Tangonan said they will make sure there will be users of this BSP-issued digital currency before it is launched. “Otherwise, you create a white elephant,” he told reporters.

In September, the BSP designated Hyperledger Fabric as the distributed ledger technology for Project Agila, its pilot project for CBDCs.

Since 2021, the BSP has been reviewing use cases for wholesale CBDCs.

BSP Governor Eli Remolona, Jr. earlier said that the central bank could launch CBDCs within his six-year term, which ends in 2029.

“If after a proof of concept that now brings the literacy and the knowledge of both BSP and the banks to a level that they are ready to launch it then will we make a decision whether to go or not go,” Business World reported Tangonan saying.

“This is an entirely new thing, and we have to make sure that we can offer it and operate. It’s a BSP-issued digital currency so we have to make sure we can offer it, maintain it and operate it safely, and that the banks can do likewise and that they have business use cases for it.”

Potential uses for CBDCs include liquidity management, securities settlement and cross-border payments, he enumerated.

BSP Payments Policy and Development Department Director Bridget Rose Mesina-Romero said they have completed the first phase of Project Agila with the selection of Hyperledger Fabric for the project’s sandbox experiments.

First steps

The BSP is aiming to assess if the distributed ledger technology can facilitate inter-institution fund transfer across participating financial institutions.

“The goal here is to obtain enhanced knowledge of the CBDC technology...then eventually come up with a baseline assessment to determine the CBDC roadmap moving forward,” she said.

The central bank has completed the first set of the test run, having tested a distributed measuring technology and tokenization of wholesale CBDC, Mesina-Romero said.

The BSP is studying the functionality and performance of the CBDC, she added.

On functionality, she said, we must assess it against our usual currency life cycle. This time, we pattern it to the CBDC life cycle of creation; creating CBDC, issuing CBDC, making inter-institution fund transfers to CBDC, and then finally redemption and retirement.”

By performance, she said, we look at whether it can facilitate 24/7 transfers, its security on the user interface, because the next phase will govern cybersecurity assessment of the blockchain technology, and finally, the data end-to-end testing among the BSP and financial institutions.”

By the end of the year, the central bank will be able to release the findings of its pilot testing.

“At the end of this project, which will be towards the end of this year, we will be issuing a report containing all of our findings and assessment with respect to our sandbox test experiments,” she said.

Retail CBDCs

Tangonan also said that the central bank is open to studying the possibility of offering retail CBDCs but does not see the need for it just yet.

“Of course, that will always be under consideration, except that we have to be convinced that there is indeed something that a retail CBDC can offer that current digital payments cannot,” he said.

“At present, with how consumers, businesses and the government use digital payments, we see no gap yet. But as you know, the world changes every day, so one day there might be a clear use case for retail CBDC.”

The BSP earlier defined CBDCs as a form of digital money denominated in the national unit of account and are direct liabilities of the central bank.

Wholesale CBDCs may be issued to commercial banks and other financial institutions to settle interbank payments, securities transactions, and cross-border payments, among others, it added.

The International Monetary Fund last year said that CBDCs are crucial in expanding financial inclusion and improving cross-border payments.

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