26 Highlights:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/139wL-v-LtFalXad0-qBwJcVhkdmvmHW-/view?usp=drivesdk


The authors thank the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation for its support of this research.
Thanks are also owed to the research assistants
at the Center on Finance, Law & Policy,
especially Bryan Ricketts. We are also grateful
for the editorial assistance of Rebecca Cohen,
Daniel Rivkin, and Tracey Van Dusen.

ISSUE BRIEF 7: SHOULD CENTRAL BANKS USE
DISTRIBUTED LEDGER TECHNOLOGY AND
DIGITAL CURRENCIES TO ADVANCE FINANCIAL
INCLUSION?
I. Executive Summary
This brief is part of the Central Bank of the Future Project (“CBOTF”), a
research
project that seeks to identify ways that central banks across the world can
improve
access to financial products and services for underserved communities.
CBOTF
engages with scholars, financial regulators and policy makers, think tanks,
financial
institutions, fintech companies, consumer and community organizations, and
other
stakeholders to examine how central banks can evolve to better promote
financial
inclusion and financial health. CBOTF also works to find ways that
businesses and
nonprofits can work alongside government sector efforts for financial
inclusion. One
output is a series of working papers and policy briefs focused on specific
topics.
This paper examines how central banks might use distributed ledger
technology
(“DLT”) to improve access to safe and affordable financial products and
services. We
consider how central banks might use DLT to advance objectives such as
Anti-Money
Laundering (“AML”) compliance and discuss both central bank digital
currencies
(“CBDC”) and private digital currencies. We consider implementation
challenges for
these new approaches relating to interoperability, privacy, and efficiency.
We
conclude that financial inclusion is far from an assured outcome: central
banks must
work to ensure that any new technologies they adopt or foster do not
exclude
marginalized groups and instead focus with intentionality on low-income
households.
Moreover, difficult issues with respect to financial disintermediation,
credit
availability, and financial stability would need to be addressed.
This paper proceeds in four parts. Part II provides a primer on DLT and
CBDC. Part
III considers four ways central banks might use DLT to advance financial
inclusion:
to accelerate payments, to improve identity verification, to formalize
collateral, and
to lower compliance costs. Part IV focuses on DLT in the digital currency
context,
analyzing non-fiat DLT-based digital currencies and proposals to create DLT
and
non-DLT central bank digital currencies. Part V concludes.

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