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Invite colleaguesWholesale central bank digital currency vs traditional real-time gross settlement: Benefits beyond a new acronym?
Abstract
Central banks need to modernise their wholesale payment services. This is not to say they must choose between modernising their real-time gross settlement systems or building a new wholesale central bank digital currency system. Rather, as this paper will argue, they must develop a common, standardised hybrid platform for the global financial (wholesale) markets. Indeed, central banks need to provide interoperable cross-border payment services by accepting foreign participants and coordinating their short-term liquidity instruments. This paper argues that if central banks want to serve future wholesale markets, they will need to provide 24/7/365 services with cross-border finality for simple fund transfers, but also for deliveryversus-payment and payment-versus-payment settlements at the transaction level. The paper will discuss how interoperability is a key issue, and requires completely common message and communication standards, but especially common identification and security standards in which distributed ledger technology and transaction-chaining are important elements. Wholesale systems must be highly resilient. As this paper shows, cooperation between central banks is essential if they are to deliver cross-border wholesale payment services for the global financial markets of the future.
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Author's Biography
Harry Leinonen is a consultant, author and lecturer specialised in payment and settlement issues. He was previously a financial counsellor at the Finnish Ministry of Finance, and before that was attached to the Bank of Finland for 15 years, mainly as an adviser to the board. He has also worked within the Finnish private banking industry and has served on several domestic and international committees and working groups. Harry is the author of various articles and books on payment and settlement.