A 12-week test will look at whether a central bank digital currency that is limited to banks’ back-end transactions would make it faster and cheaper to settle.
The CBDC in this 12-week proof-of-concept experiment would not be a mainstream “digital dollar” usable for day-to-day purchases. Instead, it would be limited to financial institutions, according to the New York Fed.
The project will simulate using digital tokens built on distributed ledger technology (DLT). If real, they would be dollar-denominated and — hopefully — capable of settling transactions in seconds.
Doing that through the existing SWIFT global financial messaging service can take days and be very costly, particularly for cross-border transactions — which is why such payments in general and remittances in particular are such a target for blockchain payments firms.
Participants include nine major banks: BNY Mellon, Citi, HSBC, Mastercard, PNC Bank, TD Bank, Truist, U.S. Bank and Wells Fargo.
The New York Fed’s Innovation Center (NYIC), which is running the proof-of-concept, said the goal is “to test the technical feasibility, legal viability, and business applicability” of DLT… to settle the liabilities of regulated financial institutions through the transfer of central bank liabilities.”
The global financial messaging service SWIFT, which has been working on blockchain technology as it fights off competition from cryptocurrencies and stablecoins, is also participating.
Pushing Innovation
Using DLT, they hope the RLN platform will “create innovation opportunities to improve financial settlements.”
If successful, such a system could be extended to other digital assets.
The test will also look at whether an RLN is workable within the existing regulatory framework. That means using the existing payments processing structure, including its know your customer (KYC) and anti-money laundering (AML) requirements.
The proof-of-concept will look at an RLN design using only U.S. dollars. The platform will allow “commercial banks [to] issue simulated digital money or ‘tokens’— representing the deposits of their own customers — and settle through simulated central bank reserves on a shared multi-entity distributed ledger,” they said.
The U.S. central bank took pains to make clear that the test was not an endorsement of any policy or a suggestion that it intends to build a CBDC, as the technology has proven to be politically controversial.