Here’s What You Need to Know About Biden’s Executive Order on Digital Assets

Here’s What You Need to Know About Biden’s Executive Order on Digital Assets

by March 14, 2022

U.S. President Joe Biden has signed an Executive Order outlining its approach to addressing the risks and harnessing the potential benefits of digital assets and their underlying technology.

The order lays out a national policy for digital assets across six key priorities; consumer and investor protection; financial stability; illicit finance; U.S. leadership in the global financial system and economic competitiveness; financial inclusion; and responsible innovation.

The Executive Order calls for measures to:

1. Protect U.S. consumers, investors, and businesses by directing the Department of the Treasury and other agency partners to assess and develop policy recommendations to address the implications of the growing digital asset sector and changes in financial markets for consumers, investors, businesses, and equitable economic growth.

The order also encourages regulators to ensure sufficient oversight and safeguard against any systemic financial risks posed by digital assets.

2. Protect U.S. and global financial stability and mitigate systemic risk by encouraging the Financial Stability Oversight Council to identify and mitigate economy-wide (i.e., systemic) financial risks posed by digital assets and to develop appropriate policy recommendations to address any regulatory gaps.

3. Mitigate the illicit finance and national security risks posed by the illicit use of digital assets by directing an unprecedented focus of coordinated action across all relevant U.S. government agencies to mitigate these risks.

It also directs agencies to work with its allies and partners to ensure international frameworks, capabilities, and partnerships are aligned and responsive to risks.

4. Promote U.S. leadership in technology and economic competitiveness by directing the Department of Commerce to work across the U.S. government in establishing a framework to drive its competitiveness and leadership in, and leveraging of digital asset technologies.

This framework will serve as a foundation for agencies and integrate this as a priority into their policy, research and development, and operational approaches to digital assets.

5. Promote equitable access to safe and affordable financial services by affirming the critical need for safe, affordable, and accessible financial services as a U.S. national interest that must inform its approach to digital asset innovation, including disparate impact risk.

Such safe access is especially important for communities that have long had insufficient access to financial services.

The Secretary of the Treasury, working with all relevant agencies, will produce a report on the future of money and payment systems, to include implications for economic growth, financial growth and inclusion, national security, and the extent to which technological innovation may influence that future.

6. Support technological advances and ensure responsible development and use of digital assets by directing the U.S. Government to take concrete steps to study and support technological advances in the responsible development, design, and implementation of digital asset systems while prioritizing privacy, security, combating illicit exploitation, and reducing negative climate impacts.

7. Explore a U.S. Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) by placing urgency on research and development of a potential United States CBDC, should issuance be deemed in the national interest.

The order directs the U.S. Government to assess the technological infrastructure and capacity needs for a potential CBDC in a manner that protects Americans’ interests.

It also encourages the Federal Reserve to continue its research, development, and assessment efforts for a U.S. CBDC, including development of a plan for broader U.S. Government action in support of their work.

This effort prioritizes U.S. participation in multi-country experimentation, and ensures U.S. leadership internationally to promote CBDC development that is consistent with U.S. priorities and democratic values.

The administration said that it will continue work across agencies and with congress to establish policies that guard against risks and guide responsible innovation, with its allies and partners to develop aligned international capabilities that respond to national security risks, and with the private sector to study and support technological advances in digital assets.

 

This article first appeared on Fintech News America