Facebook and Calibra's David Marcus: The Problem of Global Unbanked Is "Unacceptable"

Publicado en by Cointele | Publicado en

At the World Economic Forum panel discussing digital currencies, the conversation topics included Central Bank Digital Currencies.

Calibra's David Marcus highlighted that regardless of the nature of digital currency, these discussions are key to innovate cross-border payments and solve the issue of the unbanked.

Retail CBDCs for consumer accessBenoît Coeuré, head of the Bank of International Settlements' Innovation Hub, revealed that as many as 80 percent of worldwide central banks are interested in CBDCs, primarily of the retail variety.

"Central banks could distribute the CBDCs in two possible ways. One is wholesale CBDCs, so through existing banks and the banking system, or retail going straight to consumers."

Marcus argued that wholesale CBDCs make little sense in the context of the existing ecosystem, as citizens would be a further step removed and central banks themselves would not benefit from the change.

"The big question is, if you're actually targeting wholesale distribution to banks, then what problem are you solving? You could probably have some efficiency gains, but banks currently have windows. The Fed, the ECB, they're quite functional."

He raised further concerns as to whether banks are technologically equipped to handle retail CBDCs, and the issues they would give to retail banks.

He concluded by noting that there are "Interesting hybrid models" whose development could solve some of the key issues outlined.

"When we started this journey almost six months ago, the whole idea was not around a certain way of doing things, but more around [coming] together and [trying] to figure out how we solve a problem that is unacceptable - 1.7 billion people who are currently unbanked, another billion underserved."

He pointed out the progress seen in telecommunications, where expensive international calls were replaced by internet-based communication apps.

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