Replacement for cash? How the new 'digital euro' would work for Europeans
Briefly

Replacement for cash? How the new 'digital euro' would work for Europeans
"The push for a digital euro has gained greater urgency as Europe seeks to bolster its financial sovereignty, with hopes the proposal will move forward this year after European lawmakers Tuesday backed the plans. The electronic version of the money used in the 21-nation currency area would be available to use free of charge in shops, online or from person to person."
"Critics fear it would allow governments to surveil citizens' payments or even cut them off from the money supply. First suggested by the European Central Bank (ECB), the project has been some six years in the making. The EU executive formally proposed a digital euro in June 2023 but any law to make it a reality needs the support of member states and European lawmakers. EU countries in December gave their green light, putting pressure on lawmakers."
"There is renewed optimism that the European Parliament could really take that step this year after lawmakers on Tuesday expressed their support for the project. "The introduction of a digital euro... is essential to strengthen EU monetary sovereignty, reduce fragmentation in retail payments and support the integrity and resilience of the single market," an amendment backed by lawmakers said."
Europe is pushing a digital euro to bolster financial sovereignty and reduce reliance on foreign payment firms such as Visa and Mastercard. The electronic central bank money would be usable free in shops, online and person-to-person without commercial bank intermediation. The EU executive proposed the project in 2023; EU countries gave a green light in December and lawmakers recently expressed support, increasing the chances of legislation this year. Supporters cite reduced payment fragmentation; critics warn of surveillance risks and possible disconnection from funds. The ECB says it would not have access to personal data and that the digital euro is not intended to replace cash.
Read at The Local France
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