ECB Pushes Digital Euro While Reshaping the Rules of Private Digital Money

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The European Central Bank is moving forward with its vision of digital payment sovereignty, placing the digital euro at the center of that strategy. The idea is straightforward: a central bank–issued digital currency that ensures Europe retains control over its financial infrastructure in an increasingly digital economy.

However, this approach introduces a deeper institutional tension. The same authority that regulates Europe’s payments ecosystem is now preparing to directly participate in it. In effect, the regulator is becoming a competitor, raising questions about market neutrality and long-term innovation in the private sector.

A Regulatory Framework That Limits Stablecoins

Under current ECB policy, licensed stablecoin issuers are not allowed to hold their reserves directly at the central bank. Instead, they must keep those reserves within the commercial banking system. This decision is formalized in ECB Decision (EU) 2025/222, where officials argue that allowing direct access to central bank reserves could blur the line between public and private money.

The concern is that fully backed private stablecoins could effectively become what the ECB describes as a “synthetic central bank digital currency,” undermining the distinction between state-issued money and privately issued alternatives.

The Stability Paradox

From a financial stability standpoint, the policy creates a paradox. Intuitively, allowing private digital euros to be backed directly by central bank reserves would make them significantly safer, nearly equivalent to holding central bank money itself.

Instead, the current framework ensures that these assets remain dependent on commercial banks. This design exposes them to risks within the banking sector, particularly during periods of financial stress.

A Different Path From the United States

This approach contrasts with the direction taken by the United States, where efforts have focused on insulating private digital dollars from traditional banking risks. By comparison, Europe’s model leans more toward centralized control, echoing elements of the state-led financial architecture seen in China.

If another banking crisis emerges, the ECB’s framework could mean that instability in the banking sector spills over directly into the regulated stablecoin market. As a result, Europe may be prioritizing control and monetary distinction over resilience, a trade-off that could shape the future of digital finance across the region.

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