- The European Union views the influx of Dollar stablecoins as a threat to economic stability, potentially eroding demand for the euro.
- Deputy Governor of the Bank of France, Denis Beau, raises concerns about the dollarization of stablecoins.
- He demands stricter laws for stablecoins issued outside the European Union.
- The European Union and several individual countries are in various stages of discussion to launch a digital Euro. However, confusion remains on whether to go with a CBDC or with a public blockchain like Ethereum.
- EU stablecoins like ZCHF, EURt, and XCHF see negligible adoption rates compared to USDC, USDT, and others.
Europe Worries about Dollar’s Dominance in Stablecoins
The deputy governor of the French Central Bank (Banque de France) is concerned that dollarized stablecoins could dominate Europe’s cross-border economic transactions in the near future.
He proposes using central bank-backed private stablecoins to mitigate risks associated with the assets backing these stablecoins. This way, governments would better control the flow of funds as per the governor.
Further, the governor adds that stricter laws are needed for stablecoins issued outside the European Union.
Why are USD Stablecoins Dominating?
The reason United States stablecoins, such as USDC, USDT, and others, are successful is that they are on public blockchains, such as Ethereum and Arbitrum.
Most governments that back stablecoins, such as CBDCs, tend to make a mistake when initially launching their coin on a private Blockchain and expect users to adopt it. A few failed cases include Nigeria (eNaira) and China (eCNY).
The reason the general public avoids CBDCs and private chains is not only that they can be tracked or frozen, but also that they are not chain-agnostic. These prevent the public from freely exchanging it with other currencies, stablecoins, and tokenized assets.
The United States solved this with the GENIUS Act, which banned state-issued stablecoins (till 2030), i.e., CBDCs, and allowed the private market to innovate based on market demand.
Further, it is more of a Dollar issue. The US Dollar serves as a reserve currency for most of the world’s foreign exchange reserves because of the US’s importance in the global economy. The dollar has been liberal for most of its history and does not discriminate who holds it, whereas the Euro is much more strictly controlled.
Does Europe have Non-Government Stablecoins?
Yes, Europe has several non-government stablecoins, such as:
- ZCHF – Frankencoin, a Swiss Franc-denominated coin
- XCHF – CryptoFranc, a Swiss Franc-denominated coin
- EURt – Tether’s Euro-denominated coin
Disclaimer: BFM Times acts as a source of information for knowledge purposes and does not claim to be a financial advisor. Kindly consult your financial advisor before investing.