Germany’s federal finance minister has
come out in support of digitizing the euro, but is against private
currency projects like Facebook’s Libra.
Speaking with local
business news source Wirtschafts Woche, Minister Olaf Scholz said he
remains “very, very critical” of Libra. However, an e-euro would be good
for Europe’s financial system, particularly in the wake of economic
globalization. “Such a payment system would be good for the [European]
financial center and its integration into the world financial system,”
Scholz said. “We should not leave the field to China, Russia, the U.S.
or any private providers.” Echoing other European leaders, such as
French finance minister Bruno Le Maire who said France would block
Libra, Scholz argued that the power of currency issuance should reside
in the hands of the state, saying: “A core element of state sovereignty
is the publication of a currency, we will not leave it to private
companies.” Some U.S. lawmakers agree, with the head of the U.S. House
of Representative Financial Services Committee Maxine Waters (D-CA)
previously calling for Facebook to delay Libra’s launch until regulatory
approval was received. The House Committee is still pressuring Facebook
CEO Mark Zuckerberg to testify before Congress on the matter before
January 2020.
Members of the Libra Association, slated to sign a
formal charter sometime this quarter, have been feeling the effects of
such criticism. Financial service firm PayPal announced its decision to
leave the association last week, citing the need to work on its own
mission.
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