The much anticipated CBDC Conference was held in Frankfurt, Germany, from August 29-31, 2022. This leading central bank digital currency (CBDC) conference offered representatives from central banks, the financial sector, technology providers, policymakers, and academics the perfect platform to learn about the latest developments in CBDC, exchange ideas, and advance the cause of CBDCs globally.
42 Central Banks and 190 delegates from 50 countries attended the 3-day conference. The Digital Euro Association (DEA) participated in two sessions: (1) conducting a workshop on technical solutions for CBDCs and their implications in the use cases, and (2) chairing a panel about offline payments and financial inclusion through CBDC.
If you missed the CBDC Conference 2022, let us bring you up to speed!
The first day’s program consisted of various sessions. The first few sessions consisted of academic workshops, where attendees were introduced to the technical aspects of CBDCs. Dr. Jonas Gross, Chairman of DEA, kicked off the program by outlining the different CBDC design choices and their commensurate use cases.
The afternoon sessions started with a keynote by the Bank for International Settlements, followed by a panel entitled “What we are trying to achieve with a CBDC”. The Swiss National Bank, Bank of Canada, Payments Innovation, and Amazon Web Services debated this topic, each providing their points of view.
The subsequent sessions were dedicated to showing and discussing specific projects like the Central Bank of Nigeria’s (CBN) eNaira, the digital Tenge by the National Bank of Kazakhstan, and the eCEDI by the Bank of Ghana.
The eNaira was launched as the world’s second CBDC on 25 October 2021. The CBN listed several domestic policy goals for CBDCs, including ensuring financial inclusion, improving the availability of and access to central bank money, and making payment systems more efficient and resilient. The eNaira is also intended to improve cross-border payments and make remittances to Nigeria cheaper.
The morning of the second day consisted of presentations on the Sand Dollar from the Central Bank of the Bahamas, the Bank of Thailand's various CBDC projects, followed by a panel about design and policy aspects by the Norges Bank, the European Commission, the Bank of England and The World Savings and Retail Banking Institute (WSBI-ESBG).
The Sand Dollar was launched in October 2020 as the world’s first CBDC. Shaqueno Porter from the Central Bank of Bahamas noted that their main policy goals are financial inclusion, improved access to payments, efficiency of payments, resilience, and the reduction of illicit use of money.
The afternoon sessions were focused on the user aspects of CBDCs, and representatives of the Italian Bank Association, the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB), Lietuvos Bankas, and Bundesbank discussed these various requirements.
Presentations by the Bank of Jamaica (JAM-DEX) and the Bank of Zambia then followed. Ammer Group demonstrated how to enable fast, accessible and truly global payments for frontier markets using the Web3 stack.
DCash is the CBDC issued by the ECCB in the context of a pilot. The pilot started in March 2021 in some countries of the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU) and is expected to last at least until the summer of 2023, one year after the last country is planned to join the pilot. DCash is designed mainly for retail use, with the aim to improve efficiency and resilience of the payment system and financial inclusion.
Presentations by the Bank of Jamaica (JAM-DEX) and the Bank of Zambia then followed. Ammer Group demonstrated how to enable fast, accessible and truly global payments for frontier markets using the Web3 stack.
Antony Welfare outlined key learnings garnered from Ripple’s experience in CBDC projects. He also shed more light on the Republic of Palau issuing a national stablecoin using XRP Ledger. He noted that the initial focus of the project was developing strategies for cross-border payments and a USD-backed digital currency for Palau.
The conference’s last day commenced with a presentation by Ripple about how a CBDC can be a platform for innovation, improving lives of citizens and businesses through financial inclusion. The subsequent sessions considered the presentations of the e-krona by Sveriges Riksbank, and the digital shekel CBDC project by the Bank of Israel.
The Bank of Japan and the Association of German Banks participated in a panel discussion on the required collaborative approach to properly embedding CBDCs in the existing financial system. The Central Bank of Brazil shared its projects on cross-border payments using CBDC.
The afternoon sessions began with a conceptual panel regarding CBDC, stablecoins, and other digital forms of money. The Digital Dollar Project, the Central Bank of Nigeria and the National Bank of Georgia shared their visions, risks, challenges and opportunities of CBDCs.
Conrad Kraft, Executive Director of DEA, discussed offline payments and financial inclusion using CBDCs with the Central Bank of Hungary, the Bank of Ghana, the Bank of Zambia, and nChain. It was surprising how many CBDC tech providers focus on offline payment use cases, demonstrating its importance to the successful adoption of CBDCs.
The final panel discussion brought the topic of CBDC and DeFi to the fore, where the Bank of France, the Bank of Finland, Celo, and EMTECH discussed whether the decentralized finance world needs CBDCs and if private organizations can provide an equivalent solution.
It was a real treat to finally meet so many colleagues and experts in the CBDC sphere in person after communicating virtually for so many years.