1.  OVERVIEW

1.1 Introduction

The purpose of this initiative is to jointly work on the response to the questions raised by the Fed Reserve's CBDC paper which was released on Jan 15, 2022. As a part of this task force, members of CMSIG community will undertake a joint analysis of the 22 questions raised in the Fed paper and provide a joint response to the Fed. via their online submission form. 

1.2 Scope

This task force will focus only on the Fed Reserve's paper response. Any further developments or follow up projects will be spun off as new initiatives. 

1.3 Timeline 

The response to the Fed paper must be provided by May 20th, 2022. As such, the timeline of this task force initiative will be set up to complete the process one week ahead of that. 


Task

Target End Date

Status

Draft scope of response paperFeb 28, 2022Completed
Finalize list of questions to be responded toMar 31, 2022In Progress
Complete research on selected questionsApr 15, 2022In Progress
Draft/compile research paperApr 22, 2022In Progress
Peer review of research paperApr 29, 2022Not Started
Finalize research paperMay 06, 2022Not Started
Publish research paperMay 13, 2022Not Started

2. Fed Reserve CBDC Paper Review

2.1 Original Paper from the Fed. Reserve

Please refer to the original paper from the Fed here:

https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/money-and-payments-discussion-paper.htm 

https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/files/money-and-payments-20220120.pdf  

2.2 Response Questions

CBDC Benefits, Risks, and Policy Considerations

Enter your comments below (5,000 character maximum per question):

  1. What additional potential benefits, policy considerations, or risks of a CBDC may exist that have not been raised in this paper?
  2. Could some or all of the potential benefits of a CBDC be better achieved in a different way?
  3. Could a CBDC affect financial inclusion? Would the net effect be positive or negative for inclusion?
  4. How might a U.S. CBDC affect the Federal Reserve’s ability to effectively implement monetary policy in the pursuit of its maximum-employment and price-stability goals?
  5. How could a CBDC affect financial stability? Would the net effect be positive or negative for stability?
  6. Could a CBDC adversely affect the financial sector? How might a CBDC affect the financial sector differently from stablecoins or other nonbank money?
  7. What tools could be considered to mitigate any adverse impact of CBDC on the financial sector? Would some of these tools diminish the potential benefits of a CBDC?
  8. If cash usage declines, is it important to preserve the general public’s access to a form of central bank money that can be used widely for payments?
  9. How might domestic and cross-border digital payments evolve in the absence of a U.S. CBDC?
  10. How should decisions by other large economy nations to issue CBDCs influence the decision whether the United States should do so?
  11. Are there additional ways to manage potential risks associated with CBDC that were not raised in this paper?
  12. How could a CBDC provide privacy to consumers without providing complete anonymity and facilitating illicit financial activity?
  13. How could a CBDC be designed to foster operational and cyber resiliency? What operational or cyber risks might be unavoidable?
  14. Should a CBDC be legal tender?

CBDC Design

  1. Should a CBDC pay interest? If so, why and how? If not, why not?
  2. Should the amount of CBDC held by a single end-user be subject to quantity limits?
  3. What types of firms should serve as intermediaries for CBDC? What should be the role and regulatory structure for these intermediaries?
  4. Should a CBDC have "offline" capabilities? If so, how might that be achieved?
  5. Should a CBDC be designed to maximize ease of use and acceptance at the point of sale? If so, how?
  6. How could a CBDC be designed to achieve transferability across multiple payment platforms? Would new technology or technical standards be needed?
  7. How might future technological innovations affect design and policy choices related to CBDC?
  8. Are there additional design principles that should be considered? Are there tradeoffs around any of the identified design principles, especially in trying to achieve the potential benefits of a CBDC?

COMMENT NOTICE -

Please note: All comments on the Money and Payments: The U.S. Dollar in the Age of Digital Transformation discussion paper, however they are submitted (i.e., electronically or in paper form), may be made available publicly (including by posting on our web site). Comments are not edited for public viewing but are reproduced as submitted. However, the Board reserves the ability to redact information when necessary for technical reasons or to remove sensitive information. The names and addresses of commenters are included with all comments made available for public viewing.


Additional Questions:

  1. Discuss pros and cons of DLT vs Centralized architecture for this CBDC (this could potentially be included within the response to item 22).


Members - Task Force 

Add your information here if you would like to be part of this taskforce. 


NameCompany / ProjectLocation/TimezoneContact (optional)
1Sandy AggarwalMizuho Americas NJ, USA (UTC - 5)
2Vipin Bharathandlt.nycNYC - EST (UTC-5) & EDT (UTC -6)
3Karen Ottoni 

4Manish Garg

Manish Garg
5.Boulevard A. Aladetoyinbo, Esq.

@BoulevardLP/boulevard@lexfuturus.io
6.Mark RakhmilevichOracleCA, USA (UTC-8) - PSTMark Rakhmilevich






  • No labels

19 Comments

  1. I think the google drive doc should be moved into the wiki, since it requires a google rive login as well. What do you think Sandy Aggarwal

  2. Vipin BharathanI agree. Actually Karen and I were thinking the same but left it in the Google Doc for now, just to get the page started. Let me copy over the contents from the Doc to this Wiki page shortly. 

  3. Maybe its own wiki page which is a child of this-

  4. One idea could be to make each question it's own wiki page - as a child of this wiki page? That will allow for exchange of comments per question. Essentially response to each question is an essay. 

    The list of questions here could then be linked to those pages and will allow for an easier read. Just a thought. 

  5. Sounds good...Some way to make this manageable

  6. I'm not clear one question, Sandy.

    Do we submit comments individually or collaborate with one single Google Doc for the Fed proposed CBDC paper public comment request?

  7. Hello Boulevard –

    Thanks for adding your name to the list. This effort is basically meant to collate input from interested individuals in our CMSIG and have an open discussion / debate on the pros and cons and various aspects of this CBDC.

    The plan is to initiate a dialog on the 22 different questions from the Fed and have an ongoing discussion in our forum for next few weeks. We may submit one collective response on behalf of this SIG if we reach that agreement in our discussion. However, there is no restriction on anyone who wants to submit their own individual response to the Fed paper.

    So you can definitely submit your individual response as well as participate in the group discussions.

    Best –

    Sandy

    1. Another clarification ( Sandy Aggarwal already made this clear ) is the fact that you can respond to as few as one question that is one out of 22. Boulevard A. Aladetoyinbo, either collectively or as an individual. You can probably do both, if you feel that the collective response does not feel adequate or if you have a strong viewpoint that can further illuminate the Hyperledger CMSIG or your own viewpoint.

  8. Alright. Thanks for the clarification, Sandy and Vipin.

  9. Hey guys, I've been a little swamped this week but I'm looking forward to start responding to these questions (within this forum  - not to the Fed yet) starting next week. Please feel free to start adding any comments or reference for each one of these questions. We'll briefly touch this on this topic in tomorrow meeting but hoping to gain some momentum soon. Thank you.

    1. I am also looking at the MIT Fed Boston technical paper and code…

  10. Found this Stellar policy guide paper to be a good reference for many of the questions. 

    Also please refer to some of the attachments on this page - not all of these documents will align with everyone's thoughts but they do provide a good starting point. 

    1) Consensys CBDC white paper

    2) Stellar CBDC white paper - reference for how/why a blockchain might be used for CBDC

    3) UK House of Lords paper - Is CBDC a solution searching for a problem? 

    Of course, don't miss out on Vipin's articles in Forbes on this topic. 

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/vipinbharathan/?sh=658ed2263f76 

  11. “Project Lithium” prototype will test the ability of U.S. market infrastructure to support a Fed-issued central bank digital currency using a DLT platform

    https://www.dtcc.com/news/2022/april/12/dtcc-building-industrys-first-prototype-to-supports-digital-us-currency

    1. Sandy Aggarwal Guess everyone else as well was waiting to hear back from the Fed. Res. Board CBDC joint comment mini-working group of the HL-CM-SIG. At least, speaking for myself, I was waiting to hear back. I've had to start working locally, when I didn't hear back. Though I read "updates" in the group, I'm totally in the dark where the work is going on (if at all).

      In my experience as a working group member of these various blockchain DLT etc. working groups, how we most conveniently and efficiently collaborate and work together on docs is that we create Google Docs, and add/give every working group member access, and then they can add comments, peer-review etc.

      Discussion though is mattering, it is less mattering than writing down.

      Where'd you want me to "add" my "comments"?...is there a doc for that?

      1. I agree, Seeing that we have not even had a single line "written down" nor discussed. It is certainly possible to link to the 22 questions (above) on the wiki (pages were also created for some of these). Please take matters into your hands and create answers if you need. I will create some limited answers.

  12. Details are unknown. From the link that Sandy posted

    "With this prototype, DTCC, in partnership with The Digital Dollar Project (DDP), aims to demonstrate the direct, bilateral settlement of cash tokens between participants in real-time delivery-versus-payment (DVP) settlement. The pilot will also identify how it can leverage DTCC’s robust clearing and settlement capabilities to fully realize the potential benefits of a CBDC, including:

    • Reduced counterparty risk and trapped liquidity
    • Increased capital efficiency
    • A more efficient, automated workflow
    • The guarantee that cash and securities are delivered
    • Added transparency to regulators

    "

    Other than the bolded items we do not know how it "increases capital efficiency" and other items....

    DVP has challenges, the primary one being settlement inefficiency (delayed settlement increases compression, huge trade volumes every day are compressed to around 3% of volume due to netting). A hybrid approach is probably better or even a way to represent credit as CBDC. 

  13. Sandy Aggarwal What's the update on the US Fed. Res. CBDC paper that we the volunteers are supposed to be working on?...

    1. Hi Boulevard A. Aladetoyinbo

      Unfortunately, I didn't really hear back from any one except Vipin on this topic. There was a really good session arranged by Vipin last week where Jim Cunho from the Boston Fed explained the work on open CBDC project.  

      We can still discuss and prep our response comments in this coming week if you have any feedback on any of the questions. Please feel free to add your comments to the questions of your choice and we can discuss in next few days.  

    2. Hi Boulevard A. Aladetoyinbo - my apologies for the lack in communication in this regard (I ended up taking too many things over last couple of months and couldn't spend enough time on every thing).

      I believe we had agreed as a group not to have one single shared Google Doc since we cannot upload one single doc to the Fed response website. Each question needs to be responded to individually.  Towards that end, I had created sub-pages for each question that we might be interested in such as this one:

      Response to Question 18 

      Please respond to the questions that you want to and if the one if not listed there, please let me know and I'll add (or you can add too). 

      We can have a meeting this Wed (5/11) and then another one next week (5/18).  Thank you.