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Home » RBA and DFCRC join hands to assess benefits of CBDC in Australia
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RBA and DFCRC join hands to assess benefits of CBDC in Australia

By March 2, 2023
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In a joint announcement, the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Australian financial research centre Digital Finance Cooperation Research Centre announced that the country’s reserve banking system will soon begin a public trial of a central bank digital currency. Through a study initiative to examine prospective applications and financial gains of CBDCs, the RBA will work with the DFCRC.

The study initiative’s early phase involved the selection of various members of the economic sector to present business applications for the CBDC. The first step of the initiative will start on March 31 and end on May 31. By June 30, a full ruling, which will include an assessment of the various use cases created, is expected to be released.

The use cases being tested include offline transactions, taxation processing, and a CBDC for verified Web3 commerce. Banks such as the Commonwealth Bank, Australia, and New Zealand (ANZ) Bank, as well as transaction service providers like Mastercard, are among the trial participants. Blockchain company CANVAS, co-founded by CEO David Lavecky, is among the trial participants, and they plan to investigate the potential advantages of employing a CBDC in the context of tokenized foreign exchange (FX) transactions.

Lavecky believes that the FX and remittance markets are “enormous,” with trillions of dollars changing hands daily, and that CBDCs and digital currencies have the potential to transfer money much faster and cheaper than traditional methods. This would also allow these marketplaces to function beyond everyday working hours. 

According to him, in traditional methods of transferring money, there is a cut-off time, for instance, when sending money from Australia to New Zealand, which results in a loss of friction and functionality. However, with the use of digital currencies and CBDCs, this issue can be resolved.

Although privacy concerns are a common reason why people oppose CBDCs, Lavecky emphasizes that this effort is primarily concerned with considering prospective use cases and determining if issuing a CBDC would be beneficial. Reflecting on the words of Eli Ben-Sasson, co-founder and president of StarkWare, a blockchain scaling technology company that offers its zero knowledge rollup engine StarkEx, the pilot program is a significant milestone on the road to CBDC implementation.

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