Regulators and lawmakers worry that a digital currency from Facebook will compete with established national currencies.<\/strong> They\u2019ve responded by seeking legislation to quash innovation with regulation banning Big Tech from finance.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Yet, there is a threat that no legislation can quell \u2014 one that is actually heightened by the blinkered reactions of an unfamiliar Congress in the United States. The prospect of a weaponized Chinese digital currency is a serious challenge to national security, and the U.S. needs to harness and embrace the power of Big Tech to meet and defeat it.<\/span><\/p>\n On the other side of the world, China is racing in the opposite direction, ironically also spurred by Facebook\u2019s looming Libra coin. In the midst of an economic Cold War with the U.S., China is developing a potent strategic cyberweapon, the digital yuan, aimed at the U.S. dollar and its global economic dominance.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n To respond strategically and to protect national security, the U.S. requires a coordinated response that leverages its tech companies, not disarms them.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The promise, and threat, of a digital yuan is that it can fuel and extend China\u2019s online technology to create a global common market. Vast populations do not have access to banking. Indonesia, for example, has one of the world\u2019s largest populations and more cellphones than people. But more than 60% don\u2019t own a bank account.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n They\u2019re not alone. According to the World Bank, 1.7 billion adults globally use cash because they don\u2019t have transaction accounts. However, about two-thirds of these people (1.1 billion) have a mobile phone, which can be used to make and receive payments. In emerging markets and developing economies, <\/span>mobile phones<\/span><\/a> are poised to become banks.<\/span><\/p>\n The Bank for International Settlement reports that over the past decade, cross-border banking relationships have declined by about one fifth. \u201cDe-risking\u201d is a major reason. Banks are exiting relationships due to extensive and costly compliance obligations, including Anti-Money Laundering regulations and a crackdown on tax evasion. This results in higher costs that hurt countries that rely on remittances to provide a critical source of household income and a substantial proportion of the gross domestic product. These costs, in turn, create pressure to shift payments outside the banking system to nonbank channels.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n China knows how to leverage mobile phones and financial technology to challenge and leapfrog traditional banking. In China, mobile payments caught on like wildfire because there was no existing credit or debit card system. Alipay and WeChat Pay now handle more payments per month than PayPal transacted in 2017 ($451 billion). Combined, they have more than 1.7 billion active customers across China. By contrast, Apple Pay, which is installed on every iPhone, is only activated on 383 million phones.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Alipay and WeChat Pay were developed by Alibaba, the world\u2019s largest retailer and e-commerce company with a mar<\/span>ket cap <\/span>that almost touched $600 billion before the coronavirus-led rout (and it still stands at over $510 billion)<\/span>, and Tencent, one of the world’s largest social media companies and the first Asian comp<\/span>any to surpass a $500 billion market value. Together, they\u2019ve blended social media, e-commerce and payments to create an advanced online commercial infrastructure that dwarfs the capabilities of Western Big Tech.<\/span><\/p>\n Alibaba, for example, has created an online consumer sales engine that is more powerful than Amazon and its peers. In 2019, Alibaba\u2019s Singles Day sales reached more than $31 billion, while U.S. Black Friday and Cyber Monday online sales totaled about $7.4 billion and $9.4 billion respectively. More importantly, during peak 2019 Singles Day spending, the Alibaba engine handled 544,000 orders per second. This far outpaces Visa\u2019s global claimed capacity of 65,000 transaction messages per second.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Success has led these companies to migrate to financial services. Ant Financial, the parent company of Alipay, is the planet\u2019s most highly valued fintech startup. It houses the world\u2019s largest money-market fund, with cash from almost 600 million users of its mobile payments network. Tencent has become one of the world\u2019s largest investment firms.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Tencent and Ant Financial are ideal partners for the rollout of the digital yuan. They can provide the mobile wallet infrastructure and connect users to e-commerce and financial services platforms. Importantly, they can partner with the People\u2019s Bank of China to distribute the digital yuan overseas.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n All this fits squarely with China\u2019s \u201cBelt and Road Initiative,\u201d which aims to build a new Silk Road connecting Asia with Europe and Africa. <\/span>According<\/span><\/a> to Deutsche Bank, \u201cBRI reaches as much as 65% of the world\u2019s population, while covering half of world gross domestic product (GDP), 75% of all known energy reserves, and a quarter of all cross-border goods and services trade.\u201d International distribution of the digital yuan and mobile wallets will directly connect populations across the new Silk Road and leapfrog incumbent financial infrastructures. It will give the unbanked and many others the means to pay for online purchases and build savings.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Further supporting BRI, global trade finance can be reshaped by combining the digital yuan with advanced trade platform technology to create a global liquidity pool. With backing from Chinese President Xi Jinping, China\u2019s central bank has been moving in this direction. Given that the top four banks in the world are Chinese, it has the asset strength to move forward with immediate credibility.<\/span><\/p>\n As the market for tokenized assets emerges, a PBoC-backed digital yuan will have considerable utility (for instantaneous transaction settlement) and influence, particularly in the absence of competition from other state actors. By 2027, 10% of GDP is expected to migrate to digital assets.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \nThese scenarios illustrate how China can leverage a fiat-backed digital currency to capture a once-in-a-generation strategic opportunity to create a multipolar international monetary system and degrade U.S. economic influence.\u00a0<\/span>\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n It is not clear, however, that the U.S. is well-positioned to address this macro-economic threat. The U.S. central bank, the Federal Reserve, doesn\u2019t see a need for digital currency, and it faces several other ingrained American challenges, including a protectionist industry resistant to innovation and change.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Fed Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell sees <\/span>little current demand<\/span><\/a> for a central bank digital currency.<\/span> In a November 2019 letter to U.S. Rep. French Hill, Powell suggested that “many of the challenges that general purpose CBDC could potentially address do not apply to the U.S. context including disuse of physical cash, narrow reaching or highly concentrated banking sectors, and poorly developed payment infrastructure, more generally. The U.S. payments landscape is highly innovative and competitive, with many fast, reliable digital options available for consumers. It is not yet clear what additional value a general purpose CBDC could provide in the U.S.”<\/span><\/p>\n He\u2019s dismissed the digital yuan from a privacy perspective, echoing Libra concerns from U.S. lawmakers, commenting that \u201chaving a ledger where you know everybody\u2019s payments\u201d would not be attractive in the U.S. However, Powell does acknowledge that Libra is a \u201cwakeup call\u201d that digital currency \u201cis coming fast.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Powell asserts that the U.S. does not face the challenge of a poorly developed payment infrastructure. But observers highlight that U.S. banking suffers from the same under-inclusion and lack of real-time payments that are recognized use cases for digital currency. <\/span>According<\/span><\/a> to the Brookings Institute, \u201cAmerica\u2019s outdated payment system exacerbates income inequality at a scale far larger than commonly understood.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n In the U.S., 6.5% of 129 million households are <\/span>unbanked<\/span><\/a>, alongside a further 24.2 million households that are underbanked. Free or low-cost checking accounts are no longer widely available and fees have increased, particularly overdraft and insufficient fund fees. A lack of real-time payments <\/span>disadvantages consumers<\/span> who are lower-income, younger, have less formal education, are of a racial or ethnic minority, disabled, or have incomes that vary substantially from month to month.<\/span><\/p>\n (Note: the next section of this article discusses the historical context of the resistance to financial innovation in the U.S. For Jonathan’s closing comments, click the button.)<\/em><\/p>\n\n\t\t<\/div>\n\t<\/div>\n While the U.S. maintains the largest payment market in the world, it\u2019s years behind Europe in implementing an open, real-time payment system. Critics note that U.S. consumers might have saved over $100 billion if the U.S. had adopted real-time payments in 2007, when the United Kingdom did so.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The vast majority of U.S. payments moves across an automated clearinghouse system, the ACH, which is owned by a consortium of large U.S. banks and operates on design principles put in place years ago when the objective was to migrate away from paper checks. The ACH is a batch operating system that does not offer real-time funds authorization or payments, and only banks can directly connect it. This effectively prevents competition and maintains higher costs for consumers and businesses.<\/span><\/p>\n In 2012, an ACH initiative to speed up the system was torpedoed by several large banks. At the time, <\/span>analysts commented<\/span><\/a> that the major challenges to developing U.S. real-time payments are \u201cthe dearth of innovation demonstrated by the financial services industry and its lack of courage to experiment with new payment models that could threaten current revenue streams.\u201d Real-time payments are available via the FedWire system, operated by the U.S. Federal Reserve, but are prohibitively expensive for many consumers, costing between $25 and $40 per transaction.<\/span><\/p>\n The ACH is now moving forward with a Same-Day system, but it does not provide instant payments or same-day funds in all cases. Smaller banks are not signing onto the system, as it is operated by their major competitors and they are looking to the Federal Reserve to develop an around-the-clock, real-time payments system. Named FedNow, that system is not expected to launch until 2023 or 2024. Big banks view it as unnecessary competition, while small banks look for it to be fairer, particularly in pricing, than existing private options. Banks have also actively lobbied Congress to <\/span>prevent<\/span><\/a> the Fed from providing FedNow access to fintech organizations, citing the protections that traditional banks offer customers and the payment system investments they have made.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n FedNow will operate in parallel to Zelle, a peer-to-peer payment service created in 2017 and owned by seven large banks. Zelle typically provides instant payments between U.S. bank accounts by leveraging debit Bank Identification Numbers over ACH network rails, although transaction limits are low. Actual settlement is not \u201creal time,\u201d but members agree to make funds immediately available. About 100 financial institutions are on the Zelle network.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Venmo, a PayPal subsidiary, is Zelle\u2019s major peer-to-peer rival. Venmo is an overlay service that emulates real-time payments within a closed-loop system, but funds need to be deposited and withdrawn via linked bank accounts and eligible credit cards, which adds latency to the process.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n In other countries, central banks have proactively pressed for faster payments systems and promoted competition by reducing bank dominance and control. By contrast, the Federal Reserve does not have plenary regulatory or supervisory authority over the U.S. payment system.<\/span><\/p>\nChina pushes forward with mobile-first payments<\/b><\/h4>\n
Building the new Silk Road<\/b><\/h4>\n
Is the United States ready for the new paradigm?<\/b><\/h4>\n
The historical context of resistance to financial innovation<\/b><\/h4>\n
The European model\u00a0<\/b><\/h4>\n