Sunday , November 17 2024
Home / Altcoins / Over Twenty Central Banks to Discuss Facebook’s Libra With the Libra Association

Over Twenty Central Banks to Discuss Facebook’s Libra With the Libra Association

Summary:
As per the Financial Times report, members of the Libra Association will have a discussion today with 26 officials from global central banks as well as the Bank of England and the U.S. Federal Reserve. The discussions are likely to happen on the lines of Facebook‘s work on handling global regulations while maintaining absolute transparency and monetary security of Libra users.A European Central Bank’s (ECB) Executive Board member, Benoît Coeuré said that today’s meeting will be held in Basel, Switzerland, and “the bar for regulatory approval will be very high” if Facebook has to operate Libra in the European Union.The report also notes that Libra’s founding members will be further quizzed upon the scope and scale of the Libra project. Besides, the findings of this meeting will be forwarded

Topics:
Bhushan Akolkar considers the following as important: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Temitope Olatunji writes X Empire Unveils ‘Chill Phase’ Update: Community to Benefit from Expanded Tokenomics

Bhushan Akolkar writes Cardano Investors Continue to Be Hopeful despite 11% ADA Price Drop

Bena Ilyas writes Stablecoin Transactions Constitute 43% of Sub-Saharan Africa’s Volume

Chimamanda U. Martha writes Crypto Exchange ADEX Teams Up with Unizen to Enhance Trading Experience for Users 

As per the Financial Times report, members of the Libra Association will have a discussion today with 26 officials from global central banks as well as the Bank of England and the U.S. Federal Reserve. The discussions are likely to happen on the lines of Facebook‘s work on handling global regulations while maintaining absolute transparency and monetary security of Libra users.

A European Central Bank’s (ECB) Executive Board member, Benoît Coeuré said that today’s meeting will be held in Basel, Switzerland, and “the bar for regulatory approval will be very high” if Facebook has to operate Libra in the European Union.

The report also notes that Libra’s founding members will be further quizzed upon the scope and scale of the Libra project. Besides, the findings of this meeting will be forwarded to the G7 finance ministers in October, next month.

After the last three months of convincing global regulators, this comes as a relief to Facebook it has ultimately managed to get the regulators on the same table. While it would be too early to comment anything, the Libra Association has welcomed this move saying:

“We welcome this engagement and have deliberately designed a long launch runway to have these conversations, educate stakeholders and incorporate their feedback in our design.”

Competition to Libra

Facebook’s announcement of the Libra cryptocurrency in June 2019 has caused regulators to get up on their toes and consider crypto options seriously. Last Friday, September 13, Germany and France said that Libra cryptocurrency could pose a threat to their financial sovereignty.

As reported by Reuters, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire called for the need of having a “public digital currency” to counter Facebook’s Libra. In a joint statement, the two countries said:

“France and Germany consider that the Libra project, as set out in Facebook’s blueprint, fails to convince that those risks will be properly addressed.”

Besides, the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) has previously warned against the entry of big tech i.e Facebook, Google and Amazon in the payments market and the risks it could bring to the banking sector.

On the other hand, China has already accelerated its development of a state-owned digital currency backed by its central bank PBoC. As per the claims by the Chinese officials, it is all set to launch the Digital Yuan this November 2019.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *