Re: Blockchain/Digital Currency as part of 'The Great Reset'
Posted: Thu Mar 16, 2023 11:15 pm
An incredible post from the FB page of Danica Niketic. If you do FB, I highly recommend following her.
On CBDC’s
#ClassWar
Late February 2023, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) General manager Agustin Carstens calls for a “programmable ledger in a public-private partnership” to unify Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), tokenized deposits, and fast payment systems.
In a keynote speech at the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) on February 22, Carstens said that in order to fully realize the potential of new financial technologies like CBDCs, tokenized deposits, and fast payments systems, “We need some way to bring them all together.”
“There is great promise in developing the idea of a ‘unified ledger’ with a common programming environment.
“A unified ledger is a digital infrastructure with the potential to combine the monetary system with other registries of real and financial claims.
“It would need to be a public-private partnership with a clear division of roles, and where the central bank is tasked with underpinning the trust in money.”
https://www.bis.org/speeches/sp230222.htm
Programmability is a key feature of CBDC, meaning central banks and their customers could have total control over when, where, and how the money is spent.
According to the BIS Annual Economic Report 2022, “New capabilities such as programmability, composability and tokenization are not the preserve of crypto, but can instead be built on top of central bank digital currencies.”
The report goes on to say that “industry could benefit from CBDCs, which could underpin a decentralized system, by enabling regulated financial institutions to issue programmable money.” https://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2022e.pdf
Speaking at a high-level roundtable on CBDC in Washington, DC in October 2022, International Monetary Fund (IMF) deputy managing director and former People’s Bank of China (PBoC) deputy governor Bo Li explained how CBDC’s could be programmed to determine what people could own.
“CBDC can allow government agencies and private sector players to program — to create smart contracts — to allow targeted policy functions. For example, welfare payment; for example, consumption coupons; for example, food stamps.
“By programming CBDC, those [sic] money can be precisely targeted for what kind of people can own and what kind of use this money can be utilized.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2I9HR7BTmn0
Speaking at an International Monetary Fund (IMF) seminar on October 19, 2020, Carstens explained that a CBDC gives the central bank both “absolute control” over the use of the CBDC, along with the technology to enforce that control:
“We tend to establish the equivalence with cash, and there is a huge difference there.
“For example, in cash we don’t know for example who’s using a 100 dollar bill today. We don’t know who is a 1,000 peso bill today.
“A key difference with a CBDC is the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that will determine the use of that expression of central bank liability, and also, we will have the technology to enforce that.
“Those two issues are extremely important, and that makes a huge difference with respect to what cash is.”
https://meetings.imf.org/en/2020/Annual ... the-future
On September 27, 2022, France’s central bank — the Banque de France — held an international roundtable in which central bankers from the US and the EU confirmed that digital dollars and euros would not be anonymous.
“It [CBDC] would not be anonymous. It would not be an anonymous bearer instrument” — Jerome Powell, Federal Reserve, 2022
“The tokenization of finance” https://www.banque-france.fr/en/confere ... -september
During the international roundtable, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said that with respect to an American CBDC rollout:
“If we were to pursue a CBDC, it would at the minimum have the following four characteristics:
“First is intermediated. Second is privacy protected.
“The third is identity verified, so it would not be anonymous. It would not be an anonymous bearer instrument.
“And fourth is transferable or interoperable.
“So, we would be looking to balance privacy protection with identity verification, which has to be done of course in today’s traditional banking system as well.” — Jerome Powell, Federal Reserve, 2022
Time stamp 1:36:45
https://youtu.be/r_9GrgvNkxY
“In terms of anonymity, there would not be complete anonymity as there is with bank notes” — Christine Lagarde, European Central Bank, 2022
In the same vein as her American counterpart, European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde also acknowledged that a digital euro would not be anonymous.
“When we surveyed Europeans, the first concern that they had in addition to the support to the digital euro was privacy,” said Lagarde, adding, “privacy is first and foremost on their mind when we develop the digital euro.
“In terms of anonymity, there would not be complete anonymity as there is with bank notes, for instance, but there would be a limited level of disclosure and certainly not at the central bank level.”
In the absence of complete anonymity, a digital identity system would need to be in place.
Lagarde said that this would not take place at the central bank level, at least not in the European Union, so to whom will digital identity schemes be delegated?
“By drawing on information from national registries and from other public and private sources, such as education certificates, tax and benefits records, property registries etc, a digital ID serves to establish individual identities online” — Bank for International Settlements, Annual Economic Report, 2021
To get a clearer understanding of which entities could be in charge of handling digital identity schemes related to CBDC, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) annual economic report for 2021 highlighted five scenarios using public and private entities (https://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2021e.pdf):
*Separate Private Digital ID Systems
*Private Collaborative Governance
*Private Collaborative Governance, Public Guidance
*Public-Private Governance
*Government-Issued
According to the 2021 BIS report, “A digital identity scheme, which could combine information from a variety of sources to circumvent the need for paper-based documentation, will thus play an important role in such an account based design.”
This digital identity, according to the BIS, would draw on “information from national registries and from other public and private sources, such as education certificates, tax and benefits records, property registries, etc.”
“The most promising way of providing central bank money in the digital age is an account-based CBDC built on digital ID with official sector involvement” — Bank for International Settlements, Annual Economic Report, 2021
https://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2021e.pdf
Apart from eliminating the anonymity that physical bank notes provide while requiring some form digital identity scheme to operate, CBDCs may be fully programmable, meaning central banks and their customers could have total control over when, where, and how the money is spent.
According to the BIS Annual Economic Report 2022, “New capabilities such as programmability, composability and tokenization are not the preserve of crypto, but can instead be built on top of central bank digital currencies.”
The report goes on to say that “industry could benefit from CBDCs, which could underpin a decentralized system, by enabling regulated financial institutions to issue programmable money.”
“A key difference with a CBDC is the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that will determine the use of that expression of central bank liability, and also, we will have the technology to enforce that” — Agustin Carstens, Bank for International Settlements, 2020
https://youtu.be/mVmKN4DSu3g
New capabilities such as programmability, composability and tokenization are not the preserve of crypto, but can instead be built on top of central bank digital currencies” — Bank for International Settlements, Annual Economic Report, 2022
Speaking at an International Monetary Fund (IMF) seminar on October 19, 2020, BIS general manager Augustin Carstens explained that a CBDC gives the central bank both “absolute control” over the use of the CBDC, along with the technology to enforce that control.
“We tend to establish the equivalence with cash, and there is a huge difference there,” Carsten said in 2020.
“For example, in cash we don’t know for example who’s using a 100 dollar bill today. We don’t know who is a 1,000 peso bill today.
“A key difference with a CBDC is the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that will determine the use of that expression of central bank liability, and also, we will have the technology to enforce that.
“Those two issues are extremely important, and that makes a huge difference with respect to what cash is.”
Speaking at CyberPolygon 2021, Alexey Zabotkin, Bank of Russia, said:
“This [digital ruble] will permit better traceability of payments and money flow, and also explore the possibility of setting conditions on permitted terms of use of a given unit of currency”
“Just imagine that you are able to give your kids some money in digital rubles and then restrict their use for purchase of junk food” — Alexey Zabotkin, Bank of Russia, Cyber Polygon 2021
https://youtu.be/7E00PocVkys
On CBDC’s
#ClassWar
Late February 2023, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) General manager Agustin Carstens calls for a “programmable ledger in a public-private partnership” to unify Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), tokenized deposits, and fast payment systems.
In a keynote speech at the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) on February 22, Carstens said that in order to fully realize the potential of new financial technologies like CBDCs, tokenized deposits, and fast payments systems, “We need some way to bring them all together.”
“There is great promise in developing the idea of a ‘unified ledger’ with a common programming environment.
“A unified ledger is a digital infrastructure with the potential to combine the monetary system with other registries of real and financial claims.
“It would need to be a public-private partnership with a clear division of roles, and where the central bank is tasked with underpinning the trust in money.”
https://www.bis.org/speeches/sp230222.htm
Programmability is a key feature of CBDC, meaning central banks and their customers could have total control over when, where, and how the money is spent.
According to the BIS Annual Economic Report 2022, “New capabilities such as programmability, composability and tokenization are not the preserve of crypto, but can instead be built on top of central bank digital currencies.”
The report goes on to say that “industry could benefit from CBDCs, which could underpin a decentralized system, by enabling regulated financial institutions to issue programmable money.” https://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2022e.pdf
Speaking at a high-level roundtable on CBDC in Washington, DC in October 2022, International Monetary Fund (IMF) deputy managing director and former People’s Bank of China (PBoC) deputy governor Bo Li explained how CBDC’s could be programmed to determine what people could own.
“CBDC can allow government agencies and private sector players to program — to create smart contracts — to allow targeted policy functions. For example, welfare payment; for example, consumption coupons; for example, food stamps.
“By programming CBDC, those [sic] money can be precisely targeted for what kind of people can own and what kind of use this money can be utilized.”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2I9HR7BTmn0
Speaking at an International Monetary Fund (IMF) seminar on October 19, 2020, Carstens explained that a CBDC gives the central bank both “absolute control” over the use of the CBDC, along with the technology to enforce that control:
“We tend to establish the equivalence with cash, and there is a huge difference there.
“For example, in cash we don’t know for example who’s using a 100 dollar bill today. We don’t know who is a 1,000 peso bill today.
“A key difference with a CBDC is the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that will determine the use of that expression of central bank liability, and also, we will have the technology to enforce that.
“Those two issues are extremely important, and that makes a huge difference with respect to what cash is.”
https://meetings.imf.org/en/2020/Annual ... the-future
On September 27, 2022, France’s central bank — the Banque de France — held an international roundtable in which central bankers from the US and the EU confirmed that digital dollars and euros would not be anonymous.
“It [CBDC] would not be anonymous. It would not be an anonymous bearer instrument” — Jerome Powell, Federal Reserve, 2022
“The tokenization of finance” https://www.banque-france.fr/en/confere ... -september
During the international roundtable, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said that with respect to an American CBDC rollout:
“If we were to pursue a CBDC, it would at the minimum have the following four characteristics:
“First is intermediated. Second is privacy protected.
“The third is identity verified, so it would not be anonymous. It would not be an anonymous bearer instrument.
“And fourth is transferable or interoperable.
“So, we would be looking to balance privacy protection with identity verification, which has to be done of course in today’s traditional banking system as well.” — Jerome Powell, Federal Reserve, 2022
Time stamp 1:36:45
https://youtu.be/r_9GrgvNkxY
“In terms of anonymity, there would not be complete anonymity as there is with bank notes” — Christine Lagarde, European Central Bank, 2022
In the same vein as her American counterpart, European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde also acknowledged that a digital euro would not be anonymous.
“When we surveyed Europeans, the first concern that they had in addition to the support to the digital euro was privacy,” said Lagarde, adding, “privacy is first and foremost on their mind when we develop the digital euro.
“In terms of anonymity, there would not be complete anonymity as there is with bank notes, for instance, but there would be a limited level of disclosure and certainly not at the central bank level.”
In the absence of complete anonymity, a digital identity system would need to be in place.
Lagarde said that this would not take place at the central bank level, at least not in the European Union, so to whom will digital identity schemes be delegated?
“By drawing on information from national registries and from other public and private sources, such as education certificates, tax and benefits records, property registries etc, a digital ID serves to establish individual identities online” — Bank for International Settlements, Annual Economic Report, 2021
To get a clearer understanding of which entities could be in charge of handling digital identity schemes related to CBDC, the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) annual economic report for 2021 highlighted five scenarios using public and private entities (https://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2021e.pdf):
*Separate Private Digital ID Systems
*Private Collaborative Governance
*Private Collaborative Governance, Public Guidance
*Public-Private Governance
*Government-Issued
According to the 2021 BIS report, “A digital identity scheme, which could combine information from a variety of sources to circumvent the need for paper-based documentation, will thus play an important role in such an account based design.”
This digital identity, according to the BIS, would draw on “information from national registries and from other public and private sources, such as education certificates, tax and benefits records, property registries, etc.”
“The most promising way of providing central bank money in the digital age is an account-based CBDC built on digital ID with official sector involvement” — Bank for International Settlements, Annual Economic Report, 2021
https://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2021e.pdf
Apart from eliminating the anonymity that physical bank notes provide while requiring some form digital identity scheme to operate, CBDCs may be fully programmable, meaning central banks and their customers could have total control over when, where, and how the money is spent.
According to the BIS Annual Economic Report 2022, “New capabilities such as programmability, composability and tokenization are not the preserve of crypto, but can instead be built on top of central bank digital currencies.”
The report goes on to say that “industry could benefit from CBDCs, which could underpin a decentralized system, by enabling regulated financial institutions to issue programmable money.”
“A key difference with a CBDC is the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that will determine the use of that expression of central bank liability, and also, we will have the technology to enforce that” — Agustin Carstens, Bank for International Settlements, 2020
https://youtu.be/mVmKN4DSu3g
New capabilities such as programmability, composability and tokenization are not the preserve of crypto, but can instead be built on top of central bank digital currencies” — Bank for International Settlements, Annual Economic Report, 2022
Speaking at an International Monetary Fund (IMF) seminar on October 19, 2020, BIS general manager Augustin Carstens explained that a CBDC gives the central bank both “absolute control” over the use of the CBDC, along with the technology to enforce that control.
“We tend to establish the equivalence with cash, and there is a huge difference there,” Carsten said in 2020.
“For example, in cash we don’t know for example who’s using a 100 dollar bill today. We don’t know who is a 1,000 peso bill today.
“A key difference with a CBDC is the central bank will have absolute control on the rules and regulations that will determine the use of that expression of central bank liability, and also, we will have the technology to enforce that.
“Those two issues are extremely important, and that makes a huge difference with respect to what cash is.”
Speaking at CyberPolygon 2021, Alexey Zabotkin, Bank of Russia, said:
“This [digital ruble] will permit better traceability of payments and money flow, and also explore the possibility of setting conditions on permitted terms of use of a given unit of currency”
“Just imagine that you are able to give your kids some money in digital rubles and then restrict their use for purchase of junk food” — Alexey Zabotkin, Bank of Russia, Cyber Polygon 2021
https://youtu.be/7E00PocVkys




