- Category Tagging: Central Bank Policy | Global Market
- Isabel Schnabel, a member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank (ECB), stated that stablecoins pose multiple potential risks to global financial stability and the transmission of monetary policy. Establishing the digital euro (EUR) as a public monetary anchor is the ECB's best response.
- In contrast, Christopher Waller, a member of the Federal Reserve (Fed) Board, expressed an opposing policy stance the previous day, arguing that the global expansion of stablecoins could enhance the international influence of the US dollar (USD) and US monetary policy, while strongly questioning the actual value of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs).
The ECB plans to address the structural challenges posed by private crypto assets to the traditional fiat currency system through technological innovation at the foundational level, by advancing the retail application of the digital euro and the strategic layout of tokenized central bank money in wholesale markets.
Policy Level Highlights Potential Systemic Risks of Stablecoins
Isabel Schnabel, a member of the ECB Executive Board, issued a clear warning about the expansion momentum of private stablecoins in a public statement. Schnabel pointed out that while these private monetary innovations can bring efficiency improvements at the technical level, their potential negative effects cannot be ignored. The large-scale application of stablecoins could significantly increase the risk of asset runs within the financial system and amplify systemic vulnerabilities during periods of liquidity stress. More critically, the widespread use of stablecoins could weaken the effectiveness of central bank interest rate decisions in transmitting to the real economy, thereby putting pressure on the regulatory efficiency of traditional monetary policy tools.
Transatlantic Liquidity Discourse Divergence
Behind the ECB's active preparation of a defensive strategy for the digital euro is an implicit contest for control over digital asset standards between major central banks across the Atlantic. Schnabel mentioned that the widespread use of unregulated or weakly regulated stablecoins in international settlements could further consolidate the US dollar's dominance in the international monetary system, thereby marginally squeezing the euro's internationalization process. However, this view contrasts sharply with the statements of Fed Board member Christopher Waller. Waller previously stated that the global spread of stablecoins essentially benefits the expansion of the US central bank's policy reach, thus there is no need to overly worry about their substitution effect on traditional fiat currencies.
Advancement Path of the Digital Euro Dual-Track Strategy
In response to the competition from private stablecoin systems, the ECB's core solution is not simply administrative bans, but rather accelerating the construction of its own sovereign digital currency ecosystem. Schnabel emphasized that the ECB's long-term strategy will deeply rely on a dual-track framework: on one hand, actively promoting the digital euro for retail use, making it a solid public monetary anchor in the modern retail payment system; on the other hand, developing tokenized central bank money for wholesale use to meet the needs of high-frequency, large-scale settlements between financial institutions using distributed ledger technology. If public money fails to keep pace with technological iterations, control over market pricing systems and settlement efficiency may shift to private institutions.
Ownership of Technological Dividends and Future Compliance Contests
Schnabel further elaborated on a key technological logic, stating that the many clearing and cross-border advantages currently demonstrated by stablecoins essentially stem from the advanced nature of their underlying distributed ledger technology, rather than the asset characteristics of these tools or their private issuers. This means that central banks, through technological upgrades, are fully capable of providing equally efficient or even more secure sovereign digital solutions without sacrificing financial stability. The current global macroeconomic environment is complex and intertwined, and if future regulatory standards for private stablecoins fail to achieve global uniformity, the monetary sovereignty of major economies will face long-term challenges of marginal reassessment.




