We have now seen many CBDCs globally: over 130 countries exploring or experimenting with CBDCs. As of January 2024, ten countries have fully launched their CBDCs: The Bahamas (Sand Dollar, 2020), Jamaica (Jam-Dex, 2021), Nigeria (eNaira, 2021), East Caribbean Currency Union (Dcash, 2022), Ukraine (e-hryvnia, 2022), Sweden (e-krona, in pilot testing), South Korea (digital won, in pilot testing), Thailand (Bakong, in pilot testing), Russia (digital ruble, in pilot testing) and Kazakhstan (Teng, in development). Some of the countries are in advanced stages of CBDC development or pilot testing: Europe (digital euro), China (DCEP), United States, United Kingdom, Brazil (real digital), Australia, Singapore, Japan and Canada
[1].
The development of CBDCs is still in its early stages, and there are many challenges that need to be addressed. And today we have the announcement that Venezuela's Petro, a CBDC launched in 2018 has ceased operations after six years. Initially, it was expected to be a way for Venezuela to overcome US sanctions and attract foreign investment. However, it had to be discontinued when it failed for many reasons:
- Lack of adoption: Petro has never been widely used by Venezuelans: it is not traded on major cryptocurrency exchanges.
- Legal issues: Petro is plagued by legal issues, it is accused of being used for money laundering.
- Scandal: Petro was also caught up in a corruption scandal[2].
I count the failure of CBDC Petro as a blow to Venezuela's efforts to develop its own cryptocurrency ecosystem, serving as a warning to other governments considering creating their own CBDCs.
I don't support CBDC, because I count it as just a government tool to strengthen financial control and restrain the development of crypto market. CBDCs have potential implications for financial privacy: providing governments with unprecedented access to data about citizens' financial transactions. CBDCs could also have a negative impact on financial freedom: making it more difficult for individuals to save money and protect their assets. I hope the failure of CBDC Petro in Venezuela will cause governments to be cautious and abandon plans to develop CBDCs.
What do you think about CBDC: do you support or oppose it? Do you think the failure of Petro is the future for all other CBDCs? And will governments easily abandon their CBDC plans?
[1]
CBDC tracker[2]
Venezuela’s unlucky petro coin to shut down Jan. 15 after 6 years: Report