ECB bets on barnstorming start for digital euro – POLITICO

“The impact on savings and retail banks of the digital euro taking a big chunk of card transactions will depend on the holding limits the ECB imposes, and [on] the underlying business model of the digital currency,” said Diederik Bruggink, senior director of payments, digital finance and innovation at the European Savings and Retail Banking Group. The higher the holding limits allowed for the digital euro and the lower the fees for payments between service providers, the worse it will be for banks, he explained.

A large part of payment fees currently goes to companies such as Visa and Mastercard and other fintech firms located outside Europe. | Luong Thai Linh/EPA

According to European Banking Authority estimates, fees and commissions account for around 30 percent of net operating income at the continent’s banks, and payment-related fees account for more than a quarter of that.

The ECB has argued that the digital euro could offer fresh business opportunities for domestic service providers that are finding it increasingly difficult to compete with international card schemes and mobile payment solutions. Not only can banks serve as wallet providers and create other add-on services, but by embedding digital euro services, banks can retain customers who might otherwise migrate to Big Tech wallets, it argues.

The question is whether the public can bring itself to care. After a slow start, recent surveys show awareness and interest may be taking off. A survey by consultants BearingPoint in February showed one-third of respondents across the eurozone would be willing to use the digital euro, a share that seems likely to rise with generational change. But a survey by Payments Europe showed that 56 percent of consumers today are unsure whether they ever would.

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While no decision on launching a central bank digital currency can be taken without legislation from the European Parliament, the project’s technical development continues to gather momentum. In the same presentation, the digital euro team argued that, should all legislative hurdles be cleared, the ECB governing council should approve close to €1.5 billion to bring the project to life.

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