“Globally, more than two-thirds of central banks consider that they are
 likely to or might possibly issue a retail CBDC in either the short- or
 medium-term,” said the BIS. 
A survey conducted by the Bank for International Settlements, or BIS,
 suggested that many central banks around the world are looking into 
rolling out a central bank digital currency, or CBDC.
In a paper released on Friday, the BIS Monetary and Economic Department said
 90% of 81 central banks surveyed from October to December 2021 were 
“engaged in some form of CBDC work,” with 26% running pilots on CBDCs 
and more than 60% doing experiments or proofs-of-concept related to a 
digital currency. According to the BIS, the increase in interest around 
CBDCs — up from roughly 83% in 2020 — may have been driven by a shift to
 digital solutions amid the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the growth in 
stablecoins and other cryptocurrencies.
“Globally, more than 
two-thirds of central banks consider that they are likely to or might 
possibly issue a retail CBDC in either the short or medium term,” said 
the BIS. “Work on wholesale CBDCs is increasingly driven by reasons 
related to cross-border payments efficiency. Central banks consider 
CBDCs as capable of alleviating key pain points such as the limited 
operating hours of current payment systems and the length of current 
transaction chains.”
The paper cited the emergence of several CBDCs, beginning with the launch of the Bahamian Sand Dollar in October 2020 and Nigeria’s eNaira one year later as well as the development of the Eastern Caribbean DCash and China’s digital yuan
 in 2021. According to the BIS survey, more than 70% of central banks 
are also exploring CBDCs with “private sector collaboration and 
interoperability” for existing payment systems. 
“If 
well-designed, a CBDC could offer access to a safe, instant and 
efficient digital means of payment for all population groups, including 
less digitally savvy groups of society,” said
 Deutsche Bundesbank executive board member Burkhard Balz on Wednesday. 
“It would also be beneficial if CBDC could support offline payments. 
People would benefit from a digital and cost-effective cash alternative 
to choose from.”
Among the 81 countries surveyed — representing 
76% of the world’s population — 25 were considered to have “advanced 
economies” including the United States and Japan, the majority of which 
said stablecoins pegged to and backed by fiat currency had “some 
potential” as a means of payment. In contrast, more than 60% of overall 
respondents said cryptocurrencies had “trivial or no use” around 
domestic payments, and roughly 40% responded the same for crypto’s use 
around cross-border payments.
Related: BIS Innovation Hub partners with Fed to support analysis of digital assets
The BIS released a paper
 in April detailing how some central banks saw CBDCs as a catalyst for 
innovation and development while others expected the digital currency to
 work as a complement to existing systems. In March, the international 
institution completed a pilot program for international settlements using CBDCs with the central banks of Australia, Malaysia, Singapore and South Africa.
 source link : https://cointelegraph.com/news/90-of-surveyed-central-banks-are-exploring-cbdcs-bis
