Fed Bank of Boston, MIT in Multiyear Test of Digital Currency for Central Bank Use

WASHINGTON—The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston is partnering with researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology on a multiyear effort to build and test "a hypothetical digital currency oriented to central bank uses," announced Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard.

“The objectives of our research and experimentation across the Federal Reserve System are to assess the safety and efficiency of digital currency systems, to inform our understanding of private-sector arrangements, and to give us hands-on experience to understand the opportunities and limitations of possible technologies for digital forms of central bank money,” said Brainard during a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.

In addition to the collaboration and research efforts, Brainard said the Fed’s use of artificial intelligence and machine learning to support analytical functions, as well as supervisory interest in financial institutions using these technologies for their own decision making.

Update on Distributed Ledger

Separately, the Fed shared progress it has made using distributed ledger technology (DLT) to build a small-scale, experimental payment system powered by Hyperledger Fabric, one of several frameworks offered by the open source Hyperledger community, reported NAFCU, which joined Hyperledger in 2017.

In late 2019, the Fed indicated that it has assessed the costs and benefits of potentially developing a digital currency, but had not made a decision on the issue and was not in the process of developing one.

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