IMF Offers a Glimpse at the Perils of Central Bank Digital Currencies
Government-controlled digital money could mean the end of financial privacy and independence.

With Bitcoin climbing over $100,000, both investors and government officials are taking a closer look at digital money. The problem is that there's a huge difference between an independent currency designed to resist surveillance and control, and one crafted by a central bank to enable exactly that. A new handbook from the International Monetary Fund embraces the potential of cryptocurrency while highlighting the dangers inherent in state dominance of the means of storing and exchanging value.
The IMF handbook's opening chapter discusses how central bank digital currencies (CBDC) could keep government financial institutions relevant. "With digitalization and falling cash usage in parts of the world," the authors write, "central banks are considering CBDC to ensure a fundamental anchor of trust in the monetary system." Also discussed is the potential for CBDCs to "potentially help lower barriers to financial inclusion in countries with underdeveloped financial systems," to "channel government payments directly to households," and "to help reduce frictions in cross-border payments."
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The IMF and the central banks it serves see cryptocurrency as the wave of the future and want in on the action. But central banks are government entities, and what officials want is not necessarily what is desired by people needing reliable means of making and receiving payments. Putting it bluntly, government officials generally regard those they nominally serve as subjects to be monitored and controlled.
Following the CBDC Digital Trail
In a chapter on data use and privacy protection, the authors note that CBDC "may allow for a 'digital trail'—data—to be collected and stored. In contrast to cash, CBDC could be designed to potentially include a wealth of personal data, encapsulating transaction histories, user demographics, and behavioral patterns. Personal data could establish a link between counterparty identities and transactions."
That stands in stark contrast to Bitcoin, whose users often debate whether the digital currency is sufficiently anonymous or if it leaves too much of a data trail that sleuths can follow. For fans of Bitcoin and its competitors, privacy is considered a desirable trait. They want to conduct their financial lives relatively free of scrutiny by using an online version of cash.
By contrast, for the IMF authors, "CBDC data use could allow for increased traceability" that would permit authorities "to track or prevent illicit and fraudulent activities." They acknowledge that "CBDC data use, however, could pose risks to privacy, which, in turn, can undermine the trust in central bank money" and that "CBDCs could be perceived as an instrument for state surveillance." They point out that existing payment systems—think credit cards or PayPal—also lack privacy. But they admit that, in most countries surveyed, people generally "trust commercial entities more than government institutions."
Governments Could Control or Restrict Payments
Also of concern to many people is the ability to make transactions as they please without interference from third parties. That's an issue with intrusive governments that might want to restrict trade in disfavored goods and activities, or block donations to political opponents as Canada did with the bank accounts of Freedom Convoy protesters.
But private payment systems can also be a problem. Under government pressure, GoFundMe refused donations to the Freedom Convoy. PayPal disallows a whole range of transactions, including purchases of cigarettes, drug paraphernalia, some sexually oriented materials, and just about anything gun-related.
People trying to make use of their own money hate such meddling. But for government officials, this is all a feature, not a bug.
"Some may worry that the government or the central bank could use it to control or restrict payments users can make with CBDC, thereby undermining public trust in central bank money," concede the IMF authors. Nevertheless, a separate chapter on capital flow management (CFM) discusses all the different ways CBDC can be manipulated to implement policy, and the data collection needed to do exactly that.
"Different types of CFMs require varying amount of information," they write. "For instance, prohibiting the purchase of more than 1 million dollars of foreign assets per transaction requires less information than prohibiting the purchase of 1 million dollars of foreign assets by the same person, each year, for a specific purpose."
Among CBDC characteristics, according to the handbook, is programmability that restricts where and how digital money can be used: "Several central banks have either launched or piloted CBDCs that have digital wallets with different caps on how much CBDC can be stored in them and how many transactions can be made within a specific period." But they warn that "alternatives without such constraints, for instance, potentially unregulated crypto assets, could be seen as more attractive to some users."
Framed in dispassionate language, the IMF discussion of the potential benefits and risks of CBDC reads like a fulfillment of every warning about letting government expand its control of this sector.
The Power To Record and Monitor Everyone's Transactions
"A government with the power to record and monitor everyone's transactions is powerful enough to impose its own version of morality on those transactions," Paul Jossey of the Competitive Enterprise Institute warned in 2022. "Curtailing them, banning them, stopping them, erasing them, denying the ability for a company or individual to send or receive funds for disfavored people or causes."
The same year, the U.K. House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee warned in a report that "government might use a CBDC as an instrument for state surveillance."
In the U.S., the Federal Reserve remains on the fence about implementing a CBDC and says it is "committed to hearing a wide range of voices on these topics."
Among the voices it has heard is that of the House of Representatives, which earlier this year voted to prohibit the Federal Reserve from issuing a CBDC.
"My legislation ensures that the United States' digital currency policy remains in the hands of the American people so that any development of digital money reflects our values of privacy, individual sovereignty, and free market competitiveness," claimed Rep. Tom Emmer (R–Minn.).
Unfortunately, the bill stalled in the Senate. And so, an important element of freedom remains up in the air as government officials around the world consider the temptations of digital money that allows them to monitor and control people's financial lives.
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The problem is that there's a huge difference between an independent currency designed to resist surveillance and control, and one crafted by a central bank to enable exactly that.
Actually, this is the opposite of the problem.
Yeah Geeeezzzzz.... What are you Citizen-Whores thinking. You can't just keep your labors. Your Gov-Pimps have to get their cut first and pimp your services for you. Who do you think has all the 'Guns' anyways... /s
"But private payment systems can also be a problem."
No Private payment systems aren't the problem. Government is the problem.
The problem is that our government requires you to pay taxes in USD. Therefore, to avoid ending up in jail, you must, at some point, convert whatever currency you have to dollars. This is the lynchpin that enforces the entire monetary system. This has been supplemented by many international agreements that specify payment of certain accounts (e.g. OPEC oil transactions) will be completed in USD.
And that is where the government has tightened the clamps on us. The regulation of the Finance and Banking sectors has meant that any time you change your Francs/Pesos/Bitcoin for dollars, you are vulnerable to their surveillance and meddling. This is done with Know Your Customer rules, banking regulation, and often the whims of unelected regulators who deem some activity (gun sales) to be "risky". Ostensibly this was enacted to stop mafia, terrorists, and rogue regimes. But it increasingly is used to stop vice-spending and politically unpopular people.
As is often the case, the sins of the government are being laid at the feet of the "Private Market". This isn't a problem with private companies. PayPal deplatforms people because the government threatens to make their business more costly to run, or to stop it outright if they do not engage in the type of soft-censorship that they were caught doing in the Twitter Files.
If a President wanted to stem this tide, they would tell the world that the US government will allow BTC payments in lieu of tax debts. Or they would, by executive order, end the many interventions at the point of currency exchange that unjustly control our spending habits.
Of course, the President would never do that. We are only able to float large deficits because people simply must convert their assets to dollars. Removing the Dollar as the reserve currency would mean the government needs to get its house in order, fiscally, and no one has the political bravery to do THAT.
If a President wanted to stem this tide, they would tell the world that the US government will allow BTC payments in lieu of tax debts.
Weird how the "libertarian" solution to the problem of a fiat tightening the clamps with one, specific currency is the choice of a different one, specific currency and not a more broad federation and acceptance of multiple currencies or how value is assessed under the tax code.
Almost like you're just replacing the TOP MEN in "If we just had the right TOP MEN in charge, socialism would work." with TOP CURRENCY and/or that you don't actually want to address the problem, you just want your preferred man/currency in place.
I mean, why would the President tell Mexicans in Mexico that the US Government will allow US citizens to pay their tax debt in dollars? The Mexicans don't care, they pay their debt to their government in Pesos. Unless, of course, like Ron Bailey and his "Once we have lab-grown meat, we can return all the ranch land to nature." your aim is to unify the world under the BTC currency and you don't really care what culture or ownership rights or contracts or political will you have to blithely pave over in order to achieve it.
"Weird how the "libertarian" solution to the problem of a fiat tightening the clamps with one, specific currency is the choice of a different one, specific currency and not a more broad federation and acceptance of multiple currencies or how value is assessed under the tax code."
No. Feel free to substitute whatever other currency you want. Gold bullion, Chuckee Cheese tokens, whatever. Of course each currency would have its own tradeoffs. I merely used BTC because this was a crypto article.
I merely used BTC because this was a crypto article.
You do realize that BTC is hardly the only crypto and, more importantly, the crypto protocol solves the issues, including the ones you completely ignore, the same way electric cars solve CO2, emissions, right?
Are you so retarded as to think that If a bank is overleveraged in loans to assets, the solution is to simply convert from dollars to pennies to hashes to beanie babies?
We're now over 15 yrs. and trillions of dollars (more including all the man-hours, gigawatt hours, and exa-flops) on from the creation of BTC, exactly how many despots have been deposed by it? How many subjects of fiats liberated? Did you/it get Maduro yet? Just like with the green energy movement, BTC is going to liberate us all from fiat and wind/solar energy is going to save us all from climate doom right after cold fusion is invented... within the next 10 yrs.... again.
I agree with your assessment of the problems but I don't see how allowing payment of US taxes in BTC would solve any of them. You're going to have to lay out your logic more clearly there.
Re: ending the other interventions at the point of currency exchange, many of them are the result of legislature by congress and would require new legislature to undo - they cannot be ended by a mere executive order.
On your final note, I think you have causation backwards. Our failure to put our financial house in order is what's causing the erosion of the USD as the global reserve currency. We were over 90% after WW2. Now, the most optomistic estimates put us at 60% and falling. Ending the few points of mandatory conversion of assets to USD (primarily as you say to pay taxes) would have a miniscule effect on demand and thus on the global reserve currency market.
"I agree with your assessment of the problems but I don't see how allowing payment of US taxes in BTC would solve any of them. You're going to have to lay out your logic more clearly there."
BTC was short hand for "alternate currencies."
The US is able to lock down the usefulness of other currencies because we all must eventually turn our assets to dollars in order to use that money...Banks are required to hold reserves in dollars. We are required to pay taxes in dollars. Our employers are required to pay taxes in dollars. Every sales transaction subject to sales tax must be settled in dollars. Because a man with a gun will put our banker, neighbor, employer and us in jail if we don't have dollars to pay that gunman, even if we want to use alternative currencies, we must go to an exchange, where the government has locked down control.
If we didn't have to convert assets to dollars, we would be free to live in whatever monetary eco-system we wanted. The government's potential chokeholds at exchanges would be gone.
The point is not to say Bitcoin (or Francs or Pesos) will solve all our societal ills. The point is that they would solve the specific problem of private companies being able to deplatform us (under compulsion from the government) because we could use currencies like bitcoin that are outside of the government's control.
The point is not to say Bitcoin (or Francs or Pesos) will solve all our societal ills. The point is that they would solve the specific problem of private companies being able to deplatform us (under compulsion from the government) because we could use currencies like bitcoin that are outside of the government's control.
You signed up for a Mastodon account when ENB showed you how didn't you?
"No Private payment systems aren't the problem. Government is the problem."
To be precise, uncontrolled private systems are a problem for government.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/saradorn/2024/02/02/trump-calls-central-bank-digital-currency-very-dangerous-after-vowing-to-prohibit-feds-digital-dollar/
Vs
https://www.americanbanker.com/payments/news/kamala-harris-digital-dollar-vision-a-new-era-of-financial-inclusion
Yet we saw who reason preferred in their vote article.
Also guessing this means sarc is for it.
All of which is why CBDCs will do the government little good or cryptos like BtC much harm.
So, it would be more appropriate to call it "CBDNC". The currency of the big state bootlickers.
Fun Fact(oids):
The single largest cash (USD, centralized, fiat, non-cryptographically-secure) heist in history: Dunbar Robbery in 1997, $36M inflation adjusted. Performed by 6 individuals.
Single largest credit card scam (USD, 'centralized', 'non-fiat', 'non-cryptographically-secure') in history: Global Payment Systems scam in 2013, $274M inflation adjusted. Performed by 18 individuals.
Four of the largest crypto (Varied, 'non-centralized', 'non-fiat', 'cryptographically-secure') heists:
Ronin Network (2022): 173,600 stolen ETH coins, valued at $620 million.
Bitfinex (2016): 119,754 stolen coins, valued at $8 billion at the time of the hack, making it the largest in history.
Mt. Gox (2011-2014): Over 850,000 Bitcoin stolen, valued at approximately $16 billion at the time.
Binance (2022): $570 million stolen from a cross-chain bridge, highlighting the need for tighter blockchain security.
Note: Due to the nature of crypto, the specific hackers or any organizations that may support them cannot be known. The Ronin Network hack (as well as other less successful hacks) is generally ascribed to The Lazarus Group, North Korea's state-sponsored hackers.
Crypto has an order of magnitude fewer consumers, performs transactions an order of magnitude slower, and already incurs about 30% of the annual amount of credit card fraud/theft.
CBDC is the best idea ever conceived... if you are a tyrant. It is the greatest tool for mass control of everyone's behavior that man has ever devised. We should avoid having it done to us at all costs.
Look at the MAGA Nazi here.
Two comments- first, money is a store of value, which depends on trust. If people don't understand it, it can't work. I'm hard pressed to find people who I believe truly understand digital currencies, so am hard pressed to see this as a panacea for countries with underdeveloped economies and monetary systems.
Second, and more to JD's point, so many things lead me back to current events in other democracies where rights are taken away with the stroke of a pen, as compared to our constitutional democracy. If it's not in the constitution with all the protections, any law can change at anytime. If the government can use something to control the population, it's only a matter of time before they do.
'The IMF handbook's opening chapter discusses how central bank digital currencies (CBDC) could keep government financial institutions relevant.'
By "relevant" do you mean able to support their authoritarian sponsors?