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Interest in central bank digital currencies tripled since 2020, report says

Central banks in 134 countries are now looking into digital currencies, according to updated research. 

Data from the US-based think tank Atlantic Council found that 66 of these countries are in the “advanced phase of exploration,” where a central digital currency is either in development, pilot, or launched. 

A central bank digital currency (CBDC) is a digital form of a country’s fiat currency distributed by that country’s national bank, according to a definition from the Atlantic Council. 

Instead of printing money, central banks would issue electronic coins or accounts that are “backed by the full faith and credit of the government,” the report said.

It’s different from other online currencies, like crypto, because it’s backed by the national bank.

“As money and payments have become more digital, the world’s central banks have realised that they need to provide a public option—or let the future of money pass them by,” the study says. 

Interest in digital currencies has more than tripled since May 2020, when only 35 countries explored them, the research shows. 

There are three countries where a digital currency has been launched: the Bahamas, Jamaica, and Nigeria. All three are working on expanding the reach of these currencies within their borders. 

The European Central Bank (ECB) launched the digital euro project in July 2021, to build a currency that is available to everyone in the euro area. 

The digital euro would “complement cash,” by giving customers a free, universally accepted option for how they would like to pay for goods and services. It’s another way of paying with the euro and could be converted into banknotes if needed. 

The digital euro will also “reduce [the EU’s] dependence on the large, non-European private

Read more on euronews.com