By Sander Lutz
2 min read
Republican House Majority Whip Tom Emmer (R-MN) introduced legislation Wednesday seeking to bar the Federal Reserve from issuing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) directly to individuals, which he says would erode Americans' rights to financial privacy.
“Any digital version of the dollar must uphold our American values of privacy, individual sovereignty, and free market competitiveness,” Emmer wrote on Twitter Wednesday. “Anything less opens the door to the development of a dangerous surveillance tool.”
Emmer, one of Congress’ most vocal cryptocurrency advocates, previously introduced similar legislation in early 2022. That bill sought to require that any digital currency developed by the Fed be permissionless, to ensure user privacy. The bill was not passed.
The Fed has previously publicly acknowledged that it is “exploring the potential benefits and risks of CBDCs from a variety of angles,” including research and experimentation. CBDCs are digital versions of national fiat currencies, typically operating on private blockchain networks, meaning they are still closely controlled and regulated by the issuing country.
Numerous governments, including those of Japan, the UK, Turkey, the EU—and, perhaps of greatest interest to the United States, China—are currently barreling ahead with legislative groundwork and trial programs to implement their own digital currencies. A digital version of Nigeria’s currency, the Naira, has been up and running since 2021.
Though there appears to be some bipartisan consensus regarding the need for the United States to keep up with this emergent global trend, multiple American lawmakers including Emmer have voiced concern that the Fed, or the broader U.S. government, could manipulate control over a digital currency to gather sensitive transaction information previously held by private companies, or unavailable due to the proliferation of cash.
The bill introduced by Emmer today, the CBDC Anti-Surveillance State Act, would, in addition to prohibiting the Fed from issuing a CBDC direct to consumers, require the federal agency to consistently report to Congress about the status of its experiments with digital currencies.
Though numerous Federal Reserve offices across the country are currently actively recruiting senior-level developers for digital currency projects, the details of those projects remain under wraps.
Despite cryptocurrency remaining the rare American political issue to have not yet crystalized on partisan lines, Emmer’s bill reportedly has support from nine other Republican legislators, but no Democrats.
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