Digital Euro Needed to Counter Stablecoins, Non-European Big Tech, ECB Chief Economist Says
Philip Lane said the prevalence of electronic payments using Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal "exposes Europe to risks of economic pressure and coercion."

What to know:
- ECB chief economist Philip Lane said Europe needs a digital euro to counter the foothold that stablecoins are gaining in the financial system.
- He also spoke of the prevalence of electronic payments provided by non-European Big Tech firms, such as Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal, and the risks these pose.
- The case to develop a CBDC may be greater for the ECB than other central banks, given the eurozone is a multicountry area, Lane said.
The chief economist at the European Central Bank (ECB), Philip Lane, said Europe needs a digital euro to counter the foothold that dollar-linked stablecoins and U.S. electronic payments systems are gaining in region's the financial system.
The prevalence of electronic payments provided by Big Tech firms, such as Apple Pay, Google Pay and PayPal, "exposes Europe to risks of economic pressure and coercion," Lane said, according to the text of a speech at University College, Cork in Ireland on Thursday.
"The digital euro would provide a secure, universally accepted digital payment option under European governance, reducing reliance on foreign providers," Lane said. "The availability of the digital euro would also limit the likelihood of foreign-currency stablecoins gaining a foothold as a medium of exchange in the euro area."
Lane pointed out that 99% of the stablecoin market is made up of tokens pegged to the U.S. dollar. That raises the possibility of dollar stablecoins gaining traction in in the euro area and payments systems become "directly or indirectly anchored by the dollar rather than the euro."
The ECB, like central banks in other developed economies around the world, is exploring the possibility of introducing a central bank digital currency (CBDC). Addressing the competition posed by stablecoins and corporate-run payment services are often among the reasons cited for doing so.
The case for a CBDC may be greater especially for the ECB, given the eurozone encompasses multiple countries, Lane said. The single currency is used across 20 European Union member states, and the eurozone lacks a unified payment system due to diverse legacy standards from country to country.
"The digital euro presents a unique opportunity to overcome the persistent fragmentation in retail payment systems across the euro area," he said.
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