The central bank of Japan will not be applying blockchain to its payments and settlement systems any time soon, the institution has said.
Following a statement last year by the Bank of Japanâs governor Haruhiko Kuroda, that the the bank was âtest drivingâ distributed ledger technology, the bankâs head of payments has now clarified the research.
Masafumi Miya, who also oversees the bankâs fintech center, told CoinDesk:
âThese trials by the bankâs staff simply aim to understand the mechanics of DLT, rather than applying it to the bankâs own liabilities or its payment and settlement systems.â
Further, Miya confirmed that the âmain findingsâ of a joint research project between the Bank of Japanâs Settlement Systems Department and the European Central Bank are expected to be released before the end of the year.
During governor Kurodaâs comments in December, he told attendees at the Paris Europlace Financial Forum in Tokyo that other central banks around the world should engage in similar research efforts.
Since last year, Japanâs financial technology developers and other market participants have been working to chart a course for the country to take a leadership role on the global blockchain scene. The countryâs Blockchain Collaborative Consortium now counts 120 institutional members.
However, the Bank of Japan is not âobservingâ any of the blockchain consortiumâs experiments, Miya told CoinDesk.
Correction: this article originally identified governor Haruhiko Kuroda as the deputy governor.
Bank of Japan image via Shutterstock