Euro-pegged stablecoins could provide low-cost payments and counter the threat of dollarization from USD-pegged counterparts, according to European Central Bank Governing Council member Joachim Nagel.
Speaking at the American Chamber of Commerce in Germany earlier this week, Nagel—who is also the President of the German Bundesbank—addressed how Europe might adapt to its changing relationship with the United States.
One of his proposals was to “channel efforts into supporting the international role of the euro,” which would include developing European payment systems.
And for Nagel, this could mean introducing euro-denominated stablecoins, “as they can be used for cross-border payments by individuals and firms at low cost.”
Not only could such euro-based stablecoins provide cheaper remittances and payments, but Nagel suggested last week that such stablecoins could protect against the dollarization of the Eurozone.
“A hypothetical replacement of a domestic currency with [USD-pegged] stablecoins would be equivalent to a dollarisation of the corresponding economy,” he said. “In this scenario, the effectiveness of domestic monetary policy could be severely impaired, not to mention that European sovereignty could be weakened.”
In the face of this risk, Nagel said last week that the ECB and European central banks are considering new technological opportunities, with one of these being a wholesale CBDC, which would enable “institutional actors on financial markets to execute programmable transactions in central bank money.”
The Eurosystem is also evaluating the possibility of using distributed ledgers for non-central bank money, including “tokenised deposits and euro-denominated stablecoins.”
According to Nagel, both wholesale CBDCs and euro-pegged stablecoins would give the Eurosystem the ability to “utilise cutting-edge digital technologies to maintain our monetary policy effectiveness in an uncertain geopolitical future.”
These remarks were echoed by Nagel’s speech in Germany on Monday, with the ECB official reiterating that the Eurosystem is working on the digital euro, which will be “the first pan-European retail digital payment solution, based solely on European infrastructures.”
Stablecoins Could ‘Pose Stability Risks,’ ECB Says in Latest Warning
The ECB is aiming to launch a digital euro in 2029 amid some disagreement over details, with German Vice-Chancellor Lars Klingbeil saying last week that the CBDC’s delay is “harming” Europe.
His comments came as the European Parliament approved an amendment that would introduce an online and offline version of the digital euro, marking a shift from its earlier stance in favor solely of offline payments.
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