Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

CBDC Primer: Overview, Types, and the Difference Between CBDCs & Cryptocurrencies

Validated Media

Central banks around the globe are racing to speed up the process of developing and launching the digital versions of their official national currencies, also known as central bank digital currencies. In general, a central bank digital currency (CBDC) is a digital representation of fiat currency issued by a government that is not backed by a commodity such as gold.

On November 9, 2021, the United Kingdom’s HM Treasury (HMT) and the Bank of England (BoE) announced the next steps on the exploration of a UK’s central bank digital currency. As per the release, the HMT and the BoE plan to launch a consultation that will set out their assessment of the case for a UK CBDC, including the merits of further work to develop an operational and technology model for a UK CBDC. The consultation will also consider the design, benefits, and implications for users and business, as well as other relevant issues. The results of the 2022 consultation will determine whether UK authorities intend to move forward with a CBDC.

Around the world, five countries have already launched CBDCs, with another 14 including Sweden and South Korea in the pilot stage, according to the Atlantic Council's CBDC tracking project. Following an official announcement by Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari on October 25, 2021, Nigeria’s CBDC, the eNaira, went live. Developed by fintech company Bitt, eNaira can be accessed via eNaira speed wallet and eNaira merchant wallet applications, available on Google and Apple app stores. With this development, Nigeria’s CBDC trial has now become the second-largest behind China’s digital yuan.

On October 18, 2021, a report from Bloomberg revealed that Ghana is working towards adding offline capabilities for its upcoming CBDC. According to a statement made by Kwame Oppong, Head of Fintech and Innovation, Bank of Ghana, the CBDC that Bank of Ghana is set to pilot, the e-cedi, will potentially facilitate transactions without power or connectivity.

China is continuing with its digital yuan rollout with trials in multiple regions. China’s digital yuan (e-CNY) is quickly gaining traction among individuals and corporations alike, according to the People’s Bank of China’s (PBoC) Digital Currency Institute head Mu Changchun. Speaking at the conference on Wednesday, Mu said the number of individual digital yuan accounts hit 140 million, while corporates created another 10 million accounts.

The global interest in CBDC might be fuelled due to the following reasons :

  • With consumer reliance on electronic payment methods such as credit cards and payment gateways increasing, the use of physical cash is decreasing.
  • CBDCs are more cost-effective as they have lower transaction costs.
  • As compared to cash, a CBDC system, especially an offline one, may provide better means to distribute and use funds in geographically remote locations or during natural disasters.
  • An interoperable CBDC system –– one that is compatible with other CBDC systems — could play a role in improving cross-border payments.

Types of CBDCs

CBDS can be divided into two categories: wholesale or retail. Wholesale CBDCs will be restricted to commercial banks, financial and clearing institutions whereas retail form may widen CBDC access to corporate, businesses, and general consumers.

Wholesale CBDCs can be compared to traditional central bank reserves. Wholesale CBDCs may facilitate financial transactions through the existing tier of banks and financial intermediaries. Under this two-tier structure, the central bank will oversee payment service providers who will manage customer-focused activities.Essentially, wholesale CBDCs and central bank reserves operate in a very similar way. Settlement is made by debiting the account of the bank that has net obligations to the rest of the system and crediting the account of the bank that has a net claim on the system. These accounts are granted to commercial banks and other non-bank payment service providers by the central bank. Therefore, there is a high likelihood that wholesale CBDCs will most likely be exchanged and traded between commercial banks, financial and private institutions.Retail CBDCs will modify the conventional two-tier monetary system. A two-tier monetary system refers to the traditional two-tier distribution model, wherein the central bank issues digital currency to authorized intermediaries (such as banks) and these intermediaries distribute the digital currency to the consumers. In a two-tier monetary system, the redemption claim lies with the intermediaries. The retail CBDCs will modify the two-tier system in that they make central bank digital money available directly to the general public. In this case, the redemption claim will lie with the central bank and not the intermediaries.

Retail CBDCs can be further divided into two categories. One category, which has a cash-like design, maybe more privacy-centered. Individual users will be given passwords like digital signatures using private-public key cryptography, without requiring personal identification like fiat currency/cash. The second approach is based on creating a digital identity scheme so that the identity of the users can be verified. Under this approach, in order to preserve privacy, the personal transaction data of the users could be shielded from commercial parties and even from public authorities by appropriately designing the payment authentication process.

How do CBDCs work?

The central banks will design a mechanism to guarantee part convertibility between physical cash and CBDCs. In the case of CBDC, distributed ledger technology (DLT) will create multiple copies of financial records of transactions instead of just one central database. Each copy in this ledger will be managed and stored by a different financial entity, who in turn will be controlled by the central bank. These entities share the ledger in a distributed fashion. The central bank will give access to the ledger holding financial records only to selected entities. These entities will have the power to modify or completely alter financial records through a predetermined governance system.

Difference between crypto and CBDCs

Permissioned Blockchain: Essentially, cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin are decentralized digital assets stored on the public and permissionless blockchain. Since cryptocurrencies are permissionless anyone can join and validate transactions on the blockchain. CBDCs on the other hand function on a permissioned blockchain a select few entities can access and/or alter the blockchain. In addition, central entities control who gets access to the blockchain.

Use Case: CBDCs can only be used as a means of payment, and any form of hoarding or investment activity is most likely to be forbidden; however, there is no such bar placed on crypto, users can utilize crypto both for payments and for speculative purposes.

Centralization: On CBDC networks, a central bank will make all the rules and take the majority of the decisions. In contrast, in crypto networks, the decision-making is delegated to the user base that makes decisions by reaching a consensus. How decision-making is done is based on the blockchain’s governance structure.

Supply: Cryptocurrencies usually have a predetermined supply limit, for instance, Bitcoin has a limit of 21 million bitcoins built into the protocol. This limit is known as a hard cap and it is extremely difficult, if not impossible to change it. Conversely, CBDCs will be controlled by central banks, which will have the power to choose when to add or remove the supply of CBDCs. The central banks may do it for various reasons such as to stimulate the economy in times of economic distress, increase or decrease the money supply, and set national interest rates. Like fiat currency, there may be no upper limit placed on the supply of CBDCS.

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • American Bitcoin's Bitcoin reserves have increased by approximately 623 BTC in the past 7 days, bringing its current holdings to 4941 BTC.

    Emmett Gallic, a blockchain analyst who previously disclosed and analyzed the "1011 insider whale," posted on the X platform revealing updated data on the Bitcoin reserves of American Bitcoin, a crypto mining company supported by the Trump family. In the past seven days, they increased their holdings by about 623 BTC, of which approximately 80 BTC came from mining income and 542 BTC from strategic acquisitions in the open market. Currently, their total Bitcoin holdings have risen to 4,941 BTC, with a current market value of about 450 million USD.

  • The US spot Ethereum ETF saw a net outflow of $19.4 million yesterday.

    according to TraderT monitoring, the US spot Ethereum ETF had a net outflow of 19.4 million USD yesterday.

  • Listed companies, governments, ETFs, and exchanges collectively hold 5.94 million Bitcoins, representing 29.8% of the circulating supply.

    Glassnode analyzed the holdings of major types of Bitcoin holders as follows: Listed companies: about 1.07 million bitcoins, government agencies: about 620,000 bitcoins, US spot ETFs: about 1.31 million bitcoins, exchanges: about 2.94 million bitcoins. These institutions collectively hold about 5.94 million bitcoins, accounting for approximately 29.8% of the circulating supply, highlighting the trend of liquidity increasingly concentrating in institutions and custodians.

  • The Bank of Japan is reportedly planning further interest rate hikes; some officials believe the neutral interest rate will be higher than 1%.

    according to insiders, Bank of Japan officials believe that before the current rate hike cycle ends, interest rates are likely to rise above 0.75%, indicating that there may be more rate hikes after next week's increase. These insiders said that officials believe that even if rates rise to 0.75%, the Bank of Japan has not yet reached the neutral interest rate level. Some officials already consider 1% to still be below the neutral interest rate level. Insiders stated that even if the Bank of Japan updates its neutral rate estimates based on the latest data, it currently does not believe that this range will significantly narrow. Currently, the Bank of Japan's estimate for the nominal neutral interest rate range is about 1% to 2.5%. Insiders said that Bank of Japan officials also believe there may be errors in the upper and lower limits of this range itself. (Golden Ten)

  • OKX: Platform users can earn up to 4.10% annualized return by holding USDG.

    According to the official announcement, from 00:00 on December 11, 2025 to 00:00 on January 11, 2026 (UTC+8), users holding USDG in their OKX funding, trading, and lending accounts can automatically earn an annualized yield of up to 4.10% provided by the OKX platform, with the ability to withdraw or use it at any time, allowing both trading and wealth management simultaneously. Users can check their earnings anytime through the OKX APP (version 6.136.10 and above) - Assets - by clicking on USDG. Moving forward, the platform will continue to expand the application of USDG in more trading and wealth management scenarios.

  • The Federal Reserve will begin its Reserve Management Purchase (RMP) program today, purchasing $40 billion in Treasury bonds per month.

     according to the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee's decision on December 10, the Federal Reserve will start implementing the Reserve Management Purchase (RMP) program from December 12, purchasing a total of $40 billion in short-term Treasury securities in the secondary market.

  • Bitcoin treasury company Strategy's daily transaction volume has now surpassed that of payment giant Visa.

    according to market sources: the daily trading volume of Bitcoin treasury company Strategy (MSTR) has now surpassed the payment giant Visa.

  • The US spot Bitcoin ETF saw a net outflow of $78.35 million yesterday.

    according to Trader T's monitoring, the US spot Bitcoin ETF had a net outflow of $78.35 million yesterday.

  • JPMorgan Chase issues Galaxy short-term bonds on Solana network

     JPMorgan arranged and created, distributed, and settled a short-term bond on the Solana blockchain for Galaxy Digital Holdings LP, as part of efforts to enhance financial market efficiency using underlying cryptocurrency technology.

  • HSBC expects the Federal Reserve to refrain from cutting interest rates for the next two years.

    HSBC Securities predicts the Federal Reserve will maintain interest rates stable at the 3.5%-3.75% range set on Wednesday for the next two years. Previously, Federal Reserve policymakers lowered rates by 25 basis points with a split vote. The institution's U.S. economist Ryan Wang pointed out in a report on December 10 that Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell was "open to the question of whether and when to further cut rates at next year's FOMC press conference." "We believe the FOMC will keep the federal funds rate target range unchanged at 3.50%-3.75% throughout 2026 and 2027, but as the economy evolves, as in the past, it is always necessary to pay close attention to the significant two-way risks facing this outlook."