The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is planning to kick off a two-year digital yen project by the spring of 2023 in partnership with three of the country’s megabanks and regional banks. The top three banks in Japan are Mizuho Financial Group, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group.
Nikkei reports that the central bank digital currency (CBDC) project will test for possible deposit and withdrawal problems that could arise from the use of a digital yen. The experiment will also confirm if digital yen can work when natural disasters strike and if it can also be used in areas without an internet connection.
The new project comes over a year after the BOJ launched the first phase of its digital yen experiment to test the basic functions of the CBDC such as issuance, distribution and redemption. When phase 1 was announced last year, the Japanese central bank said it will run the trial until March this year.
Furthermore, in a speech delivered in October last year, Shinichi Uchida, BOJ’s Executive Director, said the apex bank would make efforts to develop a CBDC that can easily co-exist with private payment methods. Uchida added that the financial regulatory authority had no plan to issue a digital yen at that time. However, according to Nikkei, BoJ said it will decide on whether to issue a digital yen by 2026 following the new project.
The CBDC Race Continues
The interest of central banks in a centrally-controlled digital currency remains strong in 2021 with various national financial authorities launching new projects or trials to test various use cases on CBDCs.
Earlier this month, up to 30 Spanish banks entered a partnership —with the Bank of Spain as an observer—to carry out new proof-of-concept trials to measure the impact of issuing a digital euro by the European Central Bank (ECB).
Finance Magnate reports that Bizum, a mobile payment solutions provider; Iberpay, a payment service firm that oversees the Spanish interbank payments
Payments
One of the bases of mediums of exchange in the modern world, a payment constitutes the transfer of a legal currency or equivalent from one party in exchange for goods or services to another entity. The payments industry has become a fixture of modern commerce, though the players involved and means of exchange have dramatically shifted over time.In particular, a party making a payment is referred to as a payer, with the payee reflecting the individual or entity receiving the payment. Most commonly the basis of exchange involves fiat currency or legal tender, be it in the form of cash, credit or bank transfers, debit, or checks. While typically associated with cash transfers, payments can also be made in anything of perceived value, be it stock or bartering – though this is far more limited today than it has been in the past.The Largest Players in the Payments IndustryFor most individuals, the payments industry is dominated currently by card companies such as Visa or Mastercard, which facilitate the use of credit or debit expenditures. More recently, this industry has seen the rise of Peer-to-Peer (P2P) payments services, which have gained tremendous traction in Europe, the United States, and Asia, among other continents.One of the biggest parameters for payments is timing, which looms as a crucial element for execution. By this metric, consumer demand incentivizes technology that prioritizes the fastest payment execution.This can help explain the preference for debit and credit payments overtaking check or money orders, which in previous decades were much more commonly utilized. A multi-billion-dollar industry, the payments space has seen some of the most innovation and advances in recent years as companies look to push contactless technology with faster execution times.
One of the bases of mediums of exchange in the modern world, a payment constitutes the transfer of a legal currency or equivalent from one party in exchange for goods or services to another entity. The payments industry has become a fixture of modern commerce, though the players involved and means of exchange have dramatically shifted over time.In particular, a party making a payment is referred to as a payer, with the payee reflecting the individual or entity receiving the payment. Most commonly the basis of exchange involves fiat currency or legal tender, be it in the form of cash, credit or bank transfers, debit, or checks. While typically associated with cash transfers, payments can also be made in anything of perceived value, be it stock or bartering – though this is far more limited today than it has been in the past.The Largest Players in the Payments IndustryFor most individuals, the payments industry is dominated currently by card companies such as Visa or Mastercard, which facilitate the use of credit or debit expenditures. More recently, this industry has seen the rise of Peer-to-Peer (P2P) payments services, which have gained tremendous traction in Europe, the United States, and Asia, among other continents.One of the biggest parameters for payments is timing, which looms as a crucial element for execution. By this metric, consumer demand incentivizes technology that prioritizes the fastest payment execution.This can help explain the preference for debit and credit payments overtaking check or money orders, which in previous decades were much more commonly utilized. A multi-billion-dollar industry, the payments space has seen some of the most innovation and advances in recent years as companies look to push contactless technology with faster execution times.
Read this Term infrastructure; and Redsys, a payment system services provider, are collaborators in the project.
In other news, the ECB in mid-September selected five companies including Amazon to participate in a digital euro payment prototyping exercise. The goal, the apex bank said, is to “develop potential user interfaces for the digital euro.”
Meanwhile, in October last year, Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy and most populous country, launched the e-Naira, the digital version of its currency, becoming one of the few countries in the world to launch a CBDC. However, the project has failed to entice citizens, merchants, and deposit money banks, local Nigerian publication BusinessDay, reports.
The Bank of Japan (BOJ) is planning to kick off a two-year digital yen project by the spring of 2023 in partnership with three of the country’s megabanks and regional banks. The top three banks in Japan are Mizuho Financial Group, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group.
Nikkei reports that the central bank digital currency (CBDC) project will test for possible deposit and withdrawal problems that could arise from the use of a digital yen. The experiment will also confirm if digital yen can work when natural disasters strike and if it can also be used in areas without an internet connection.
The new project comes over a year after the BOJ launched the first phase of its digital yen experiment to test the basic functions of the CBDC such as issuance, distribution and redemption. When phase 1 was announced last year, the Japanese central bank said it will run the trial until March this year.
Furthermore, in a speech delivered in October last year, Shinichi Uchida, BOJ’s Executive Director, said the apex bank would make efforts to develop a CBDC that can easily co-exist with private payment methods. Uchida added that the financial regulatory authority had no plan to issue a digital yen at that time. However, according to Nikkei, BoJ said it will decide on whether to issue a digital yen by 2026 following the new project.
The CBDC Race Continues
The interest of central banks in a centrally-controlled digital currency remains strong in 2021 with various national financial authorities launching new projects or trials to test various use cases on CBDCs.
Earlier this month, up to 30 Spanish banks entered a partnership —with the Bank of Spain as an observer—to carry out new proof-of-concept trials to measure the impact of issuing a digital euro by the European Central Bank (ECB).
Finance Magnate reports that Bizum, a mobile payment solutions provider; Iberpay, a payment service firm that oversees the Spanish interbank payments
Payments
One of the bases of mediums of exchange in the modern world, a payment constitutes the transfer of a legal currency or equivalent from one party in exchange for goods or services to another entity. The payments industry has become a fixture of modern commerce, though the players involved and means of exchange have dramatically shifted over time.In particular, a party making a payment is referred to as a payer, with the payee reflecting the individual or entity receiving the payment. Most commonly the basis of exchange involves fiat currency or legal tender, be it in the form of cash, credit or bank transfers, debit, or checks. While typically associated with cash transfers, payments can also be made in anything of perceived value, be it stock or bartering – though this is far more limited today than it has been in the past.The Largest Players in the Payments IndustryFor most individuals, the payments industry is dominated currently by card companies such as Visa or Mastercard, which facilitate the use of credit or debit expenditures. More recently, this industry has seen the rise of Peer-to-Peer (P2P) payments services, which have gained tremendous traction in Europe, the United States, and Asia, among other continents.One of the biggest parameters for payments is timing, which looms as a crucial element for execution. By this metric, consumer demand incentivizes technology that prioritizes the fastest payment execution.This can help explain the preference for debit and credit payments overtaking check or money orders, which in previous decades were much more commonly utilized. A multi-billion-dollar industry, the payments space has seen some of the most innovation and advances in recent years as companies look to push contactless technology with faster execution times.
One of the bases of mediums of exchange in the modern world, a payment constitutes the transfer of a legal currency or equivalent from one party in exchange for goods or services to another entity. The payments industry has become a fixture of modern commerce, though the players involved and means of exchange have dramatically shifted over time.In particular, a party making a payment is referred to as a payer, with the payee reflecting the individual or entity receiving the payment. Most commonly the basis of exchange involves fiat currency or legal tender, be it in the form of cash, credit or bank transfers, debit, or checks. While typically associated with cash transfers, payments can also be made in anything of perceived value, be it stock or bartering – though this is far more limited today than it has been in the past.The Largest Players in the Payments IndustryFor most individuals, the payments industry is dominated currently by card companies such as Visa or Mastercard, which facilitate the use of credit or debit expenditures. More recently, this industry has seen the rise of Peer-to-Peer (P2P) payments services, which have gained tremendous traction in Europe, the United States, and Asia, among other continents.One of the biggest parameters for payments is timing, which looms as a crucial element for execution. By this metric, consumer demand incentivizes technology that prioritizes the fastest payment execution.This can help explain the preference for debit and credit payments overtaking check or money orders, which in previous decades were much more commonly utilized. A multi-billion-dollar industry, the payments space has seen some of the most innovation and advances in recent years as companies look to push contactless technology with faster execution times.
Read this Term infrastructure; and Redsys, a payment system services provider, are collaborators in the project.
In other news, the ECB in mid-September selected five companies including Amazon to participate in a digital euro payment prototyping exercise. The goal, the apex bank said, is to “develop potential user interfaces for the digital euro.”
Meanwhile, in October last year, Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy and most populous country, launched the e-Naira, the digital version of its currency, becoming one of the few countries in the world to launch a CBDC. However, the project has failed to entice citizens, merchants, and deposit money banks, local Nigerian publication BusinessDay, reports.