Certainties and Uncertainties Surrounding Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) vis-à-vis the EU Anti-Money Laundering Regulatory Framework
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Andrea Minto
Abstract
671 Technology keeps evolving, offering opportunities to the private sector to develop new products and systems to exchange funds or value (i.e. crypto assets). In the quest to exploit technological advancement and keep up with an increasing digitized financial market, central banks have been exploring the possibility to issue a digital form of the traditional fiat currency (so-called central bank digital currency – “CBDC”). As CBDC projects are progressing and shaping up, a host of legal and regulatory questions arise.
This article aims to examine the regulatory implications of CBDCs vis-à-vis the European Anti-Money Laundering (AML) regulatory framework.
It explores the recent developments of the European AML regulatory framework spurred by financial innovation and technology, taking into account both the current (i.e. Directive 2018/843/EU (“AMLD4”), as amended by Directive 2015/849/EU (“AMLD5”) and upcoming (i.e. Regulation (EU) 2024/1624 – the “AMLR”) legislation. It emphasizes the coordination between the EU AML legislation with the new substantive EU regime on crypto assets (the “MiCAR”) as well as with the new “payment services package” (the European Commission proposal for a “PSD3” and “PSR”). The analysis delves into the European Commission Proposal for a regulation on the establishment of the Digital Euro, adopting a functional approach that explains the diversified AML treatment of the “offline” (bearer-based) and “online” use (account-based) of the digital euro. In so doing, the article examines the legal characterization of “cash” for AML purposes and the potential consequences for the Digital Euro.
Note
This research has been financed thanks to 2022 PRIN PNRR research funding granted by the Italian Ministry of University and Research, project code: 2022Y4MCWZ, CUP: H53D23011450006, title “Legal uncertainties surrounding financial innovation and their consequences on the effectiveness of Anti-Money Laundering policies: coordinating EU reforms with the Italian regulatory and supervisory frameworks”.
© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Reform of the CMDI Framework – Driving Off With the Brakes On
- The Digitalisation Directive II– a Major Expansion and Upgrade of EU Business Registers –
- The Simple Joint Stock Company: Emergence of a New Close Company in Poland
- The Governance of ESG Ratings and Benchmarks (Infomediaries) as Gatekeepers: Exit, Voice and Coercion
- Certainties and Uncertainties Surrounding Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDC) vis-à-vis the EU Anti-Money Laundering Regulatory Framework
- Exit Bonuses for Management Board Members of German Stock Corporations: Legal Framework for Adequate Incentivisation by Financial Investors
- “ESG” Targets in the Corporate Governance of Banks: KPI and Double Materiality (Impact and Financial Materiality)
- Corporate Purpose, Social Enterprise Law and the Future of the Corporation: A UK Perspective