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Digital Currency: The Future Of Your Money

Digital currency has the potential to completely change how society thinks about money. The rise of Bitcoin, Ethereum and thousands of other cryptocurrencies that exist only in electronic form has led global central banks to research how national digital currencies might work.

What Is Digital Currency?

Digital currency is any currency that’s available exclusively in electronic form. Electronic versions of currency already predominate most countries’ financial systems. In Canada, for instance, the physical Canadian currency in circulation is less than 5% of the overall money supply; the remainder is held as commercial bank deposits that translate as data points on spreadsheets and other records tracking transactions among people and businesses.

What differentiates digital currency from the electronic currency currently in most bank accounts is that it never takes physical form. Right now, you could go to an ATM and turn an electronic record of your currency holdings into physical dollars. Digital currency, however, never takes physical form. It always remains on a computer network and is exchanged via digital means.

For example, instead of using physical dollar bills, you’d make purchases by transferring digital currency to retailers using your mobile device. Functionally, this may be no different than how you currently treat your money using payment apps like Wealthsimple Cash, Paypal or Apple Pay.

Following the successful launch of decentralized cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, which store value but are not managed by any central authorities, governments and central banks around the world are researching the possibility of creating their own digital currencies, commonly known as central bank digital currencies.

What Is a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC)?

A central bank digital currency (CBDC) is a digital currency that would be issued and overseen by a country’s central bank. Think of it like Bitcoin, but if Bitcoin were managed by the Bank of Canada and had the full backing of the Canadian government.

As of 2022, only a handful of countries and territories have a CBDC and many more are exploring central bank digital currencies or have plans to issue them. Some places CBDC is already available include the Central Bank of The Bahamas (Sand Dollar), the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (DCash), the Central Bank of Nigeria (e-Naira) and the Bank of Jamaica (JamDex).

Are their plans for CBDC in Canada?

Canada’s central bank, the Bank of Canada, has stated that they do not have plans to issue a digital currency any time soon. That said, they are researching digital currency systems and business models while working on building the capability to issue a digital version of the Canadian dollar (a CBDC).

Still, the final say on whether or not Canada will have a CBDC (and when it will be issued) is up to Parliament and the Government of Canada.

How Would a CBDC Work?

While an Canadian CBDC may be far off currently, Jim Cunha, senior vice president at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, shared how a CBDC or a digital dollar might work across the border in the U.S. A CBDC would function similar to actual cash, Cunha said. “If I gave you CBDC, it’s as if I’m handing you physical money, like a $100 bill. You’d have that money in your account and it’s yours. I couldn’t take it back.”

This is a key difference versus other forms of electronic payment today, such as PayPal. “If I send you money through PayPal, it’s just a promise that money is coming. Your balance may show the funds, but money hasn’t actually moved between banks yet.”

Because of that, the transactions are not irrevocable and it’s possible for the other party to reverse; there are 60 days when an ACH transfer can be potentially unwound. With transfers through CBDC, the funds would be sent close to instantly and the other party couldn’t cancel after.

Another key advantage of a CBDC is that it could be deemed legal tender. That means all economic actors must accept it for any legal purposes. “You could pay your taxes with it. Anyone you owe debt to, like the bank or individuals, legally are required to take it,” Cunha said.

This is in contrast to other digital currencies, which are not legal tender. Only certain vendors accept crypto directly, so people may need to convert their cryptocurrency into U.S. or Canadian dollars before making most transactions. When you use crypto as a form of payment, you also currently create a taxable event, which means you may owe capital gains taxes each time you purchase something with Bitcoin or Ether. This is in addition to any sales taxes. With a CBDC, you would only owe any applicable sales taxes, just like you do using physical currency.

How Have Digital Currencies Worked Around the World?

Despite the potential benefits of a Canadian CBDC, it still remains a concept for now. Around the world, other countries are a little further along with digital currencies such as the Bahamas’ Sand Dollar, which launched in October 2020, and China’s digital yuan, which is one of the largest CBDC programs, launching a pilot project in 2014.

“They are testing a pilot in five cities. They gave out millions in currency through lotteries just to prove it works,” said Cunha. People who win the lottery receive free CBDC, which they can spend at local shops that accept it.

While it’s not at national scale yet, once China has the platform ready, it will expand through banks and mobile providers, like Alipay. The central banks of China and UAE are also working on a project to use blockchain and CBDC for regional payments between nations. If these projects are a success, they could give more motivation for other nations to create their own CBDC.

Because of these trends, Lilya Tessler, head of Sidley’s FinTech and Blockchain group, is optimistic about the future use of digital currencies. “We certainly will see mass adoption of digital currencies, but it is difficult to predict how it will look. A CBDC may replace the paper version of the U.S. dollar. At the same time, society may focus on mainstream adoption of a decentralized cryptocurrency.”

Digital Currency Benefits

  • Faster payments. Using digital currency you can complete payments much faster than current means, like electronic fund transfers or wire transfers, which can take days for financial institutions to confirm a transaction.
  • Less expensive international transfers. International currency transactions are very expensive; individuals are charged high fees to move funds from one country to another, especially when it involves currency conversions. “Digital assets are disrupting this marketing by making it faster and less costly,” said Andrew Kiguel, CEO of Tokens.com.
  • 24/7 access. Existing money transfers often take more time during weekends and outside normal business hours because banks are closed and can’t confirm transactions. With digital currency, transactions work at the same speed 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
  • Support for the unbanked and underbanked. It’s estimated 10% to 20% of Canadians are either unbanked or underbanked, meaning they have limited access to everyday banking service. They end up paying costly fees to cash their paycheques and send payments to others through money orders or remittances. If Canada launched a CBDC, unbanked individuals could access their money and pay their bills without extra charges.
  • More efficient government payments. If the government developed a CBDC, it could send payments like tax refunds and child benefits to people instantly, rather than trying to mail them a cheque or using other methods.

Digital Currency Disadvantages

  • Too many currencies to navigate at the moment. The current popularity of cryptocurrency is actually a downside. “There are so many digital currencies being created across different blockchains that all have their own limitations. It will take time to determine which digital currencies may be appropriate for certain use cases, including whether some are designed to scale for mass adoption,” said Tessler.
  • Takes effort to learn how to use them. Digital currencies require work on the part of the user to learn how to perform fundamental tasks, like how to open a digital wallet and properly store digital assets securely. For digital currencies to be more widely adopted, the system needs to get simpler.
  • Blockchain transactions can be expensive. Cryptocurrencies use the blockchain, where computers must solve complex equations to verify and record transactions. This takes considerable electricity and gets more expensive as there are more transactions. These would probably not exist for a CBDC, however, since it would likely be controlled by the central bank and the complex consensus processes are not needed.
  • Large swings in digital currency prices. Cryptocurrency prices and value can change suddenly. Cunha believes this is why businesses are reluctant to use it as a medium of exchange. “As a business, do I want to accept something that’s volatile? What if I hold a Bitcoin for a week and it loses 20% of value?” With CBDC, though, the value is much stabler, like paper currency, and cannot fluctuate like this.
  • Developing a CBDC will take time and tax dollars. A Canadian CBDC is still hypothetical. If the government decides to create one, there will be costs associated with its development.

How Would Digital Currency Affect You?

If Canada adopts a digital currency, it would work as an alternative to cash but would also have the built-in advantage of quick money transfer since it’s electronic. Cunha has a few ideas on what a similar digital currency for U.S. currency would look like for consumers across the border. “Our presumption is that it will be free or near free, like cash. Other private sector players may innovate on top of it and possibly add fees, but that has to be fleshed out more.”

Even though a digital currency would be electronic, it still needs to be as accessible as cash. “Anyone should be able use it, not just those with the latest smartphones,” Cunha said, suggesting chip-based cards, POS systems and web accounts as alternative ways to access the CBDC. He also believes a way to handle transactions offline will need to be developed, so two people could exchange CBDC even if they aren’t on a cell or wifi network.

There’s a lot to be done and a lot of industry input needed, Cunha admits, but it could be well worth the investment. “While no decision has been made to move past this research, I truly believe a CBDC should be fully investigated and holds great potential,” he said. “Just think of the internet and how far it’s come since the early days. With CBDC, the possibilities are endless.”

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