Press ESC to close

‘Australian CBDC Pilot for Digital Finance Innovation’ white paper supposed to release in mid-2023

  • News
  • September 26, 2022
  • (0)

Making it to the list of countries that aim to launch an in-house central bank digital currency (CBDC), the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) released a white paper outlining an intricate plan for conducting a pilot project for eAUD.

The key purposes of the project are to recognize and understand innovative business models, use cases, benefits, risks, and operational models for a CBDC in Australia.

On Aug. 9, 2022, the RBA declared a partnership with the Digital Finance Cooperative Research Centre (DFCRC) to explore CBDC use cases for Australia. The combined research resulted in the launch of a project to test a general-purpose pilot CBDC. As planned in the ‘Australian CBDC Pilot for Digital Finance Innovation’ white paper:

“The key objectives of the project are to identify and understand innovative business models, use cases, benefits, risks, and operational models for a CBDC in Australia.”

The report on Australia’s CBDC pilot project is expected to be released in mid-2023 based on indicative project timelines, as shown below.

As a central bank, the RBA will be answerable for the issuing of eAUD, while the DFCRC will supervise the development and installation of the eAUD platform. Industry participants can join the pilot as use case providers once accepted for implementation.

The white paper advises the use of Ethereum (ETH)-based private, permissioned instance. “Pilot participants will bear their own costs for the conception, design, development, implementation and piloting of use cases, if selected,” explains RBA.

On Sept 6, 2022, Australia’s ministerial department of Treasury move toward the general public for their opinion on taxing cryptocurrencies. Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones exposed the intention to exclude crypto assets from being taxed as a foreign currency.

Australian investors were provided with a window of 25 days to share their opinion on this decision, which expires on Sept. 30 — in the next four days. The legislation, if signed into law, will modify the existing definition of digital currency in the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Act to exclude it as a foreign asset.

Top of Form

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *