The European Central Bank (ECB) is thinking through the logistics of a hypothetical central bank digital currency (CBDC).
Revealed Tuesday in an ECB report, Europeâs central bankers have developed an âanonymity voucherâ to give prospective CBDC users limited privacy in their retail transactions.
The ECBâs ânovel new conceptâ aims to bridge two clashing forces in the digitized payments landscape: Europeansâ desire for private transactions and regulatorsâ demand for anti-money-laundering (AML) enforcement.
âThe ongoing digitalisation of the economy represents a major challenge for the payments ecosystem, requiring that a balance be struck between allowing a certain degree of privacy in electronic payments and ensuring compliance with regulations aimed at tackling money laundering and the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT regulations),â the reportâs executive summary said.
The anonymity vouchers, issued to all account holders at a âregular intervalâ regardless of their account balances, could be redeemed on a one-to-one basis to shield their transactions, the report states.
Under the proposed system, if Alice wants to anonymously send CBDC tokens to Bob, Alice must hold the equivalent number of anonymity vouchers. The anonymized transactions would skip reviews from the ECBâs proposed AML Authority, the intermediary reviewing all transactions.
However, if Alice does not have enough vouchers she cannot send an anonymous transaction. The ECB said vouchers cannot be transferred between individuals, are âtime-limitedâ and are released in limited batches by the AML Authority.
Anonymous vouchers, the report states, âare simply a technical tool used to limit the amount of CBDC that can be transferred anonymously. This means that limits on anonymous CBDC transfers can be enforced without recording the amount of CBDC that a user has spent, thereby protecting usersâ privacy.â
In a tweet, the ECB hailed its research as evidence that privacy concerns and regulatory demands can coexist in a CBDC: