Abstract

The UK authorities have consulted on the issue of the ‘digital pound’, a retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) for general use in payments by UK households and firms. The stated ambition is a new form of central bank money, used alongside Bank of England notes and commercial bank deposits. There are inherent contradictions in these plans. Promoting adoption requires that users should be able to freely and conveniently receive and send digital pound payments and that account services can compete effectively with commercial bank transaction accounts. Containing the risks of retail CBDC to financial stability requires doing the opposite: limiting the use of the digital pound and handicapping account providers in their competition with commercial banks. To resolve this contradiction, ambition should be scaled back, focusing on specific and narrow use cases that cannot be easily addressed using commercial bank transaction accounts.

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