Brazilian central bank president confirms CBDC pilot will launch in 2022

The sovereign national digital currency will be based on national fiat and would have a fixed supply quite similar to Bitcoin.

The president of the Central Bank of Brazil confirmed that the country’s sovereign digital currency pilot will go live this year, Cointelegraph Brazil reported.

The confirmation about the central bank’s digital currency came during an event on Monday, where Roberto Campos Neto, the president of the Central Bank of Brazil, noted that a pilot CBDC program could go live in the second half of this year.

The value of the upcoming CBDC would be pegged against the national fiat payment system STR (Reserve Transfer System). Neto also confirmed that ‘Digital Real’ would have a fixed supply and only a certain amount of it would be minted, quite similar to Bitcoin:

“This [using the STR in Real Digital] is a way of creating the digitalization of the currency without creating a rupture in the banks’ balance sheets. This project should have some kind of pilot in the second half of the year.”

During his speech, Neto clarified that he still believes crypto is more prominent as a form of investment rather than a form of payment while adding that it could change if the adoption among the masses rises.

Related: New crypto owners nearly doubled in 3 key regions in 2021: Report

The confirmation of a CBDC pilot by the second half of the year comes after a month of the central bank’s partnership with 9 banks to assist with its CBDCs development. With confirmation from the central bank president, Brazil would be joining the growing list of countries working on their sovereign digital currency.

Brazil is currently looking to cash on the cryptocurrency frenzy and digitization. Apart from its focus on CBDC development, Brazil also introduced a crypto bill in late February to regulate the crypto market. In the works for almost three years now, the bill defines various aspects of what constitutes a virtual asset (VA), a broker or exchange, and which arms of the Federal government would have jurisdiction over the matter.

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