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Payments Use Cases and Design Options for Interoperability and Funds Locking across Digital Pounds and Commercial Bank Money

Lee Braine, Shreepad Shukla, Piyush Agrawal, Shrirang Khedekar, Aishwarya Nair

TL;DR

A financial market infrastructure (FMI) providing specific capabilities could simplify the experience of ecosystem participants, simplify the operating platforms for both the Bank of England and digital pound Payment Interface Providers (PIPs), and facilitate the creation of innovative services.

Abstract

Central banks are actively exploring retail central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), with the Bank of England currently in the design phase for a potential UK retail CBDC, the digital pound. In a previous paper, we defined and explored the important concept of functional consistency (which is the principle that different forms of money have the same operational characteristics) and evaluated design options to support functional consistency across digital pounds and commercial bank money, based on a set of key capabilities. In this paper, we continue to analyse the design options for supporting functional consistency and, in order to perform a detailed analysis, we focus on three key capabilities: communication between digital pound ecosystem participants, funds locking, and interoperability across digital pounds and commercial bank money. We explore these key capabilities via three payments use cases: person-to-person push payment, merchant-initiated request to pay, and lock funds and pay on physical delivery. We then present and evaluate the suitability of design options to provide the specific capabilities for each use case and draw initial insights. We conclude that a financial market infrastructure (FMI) providing specific capabilities could simplify the experience of ecosystem participants, simplify the operating platforms for both the Bank of England and digital pound Payment Interface Providers (PIPs), and facilitate the creation of innovative services. We also identify potential next steps.

Payments Use Cases and Design Options for Interoperability and Funds Locking across Digital Pounds and Commercial Bank Money

TL;DR

A financial market infrastructure (FMI) providing specific capabilities could simplify the experience of ecosystem participants, simplify the operating platforms for both the Bank of England and digital pound Payment Interface Providers (PIPs), and facilitate the creation of innovative services.

Abstract

Central banks are actively exploring retail central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), with the Bank of England currently in the design phase for a potential UK retail CBDC, the digital pound. In a previous paper, we defined and explored the important concept of functional consistency (which is the principle that different forms of money have the same operational characteristics) and evaluated design options to support functional consistency across digital pounds and commercial bank money, based on a set of key capabilities. In this paper, we continue to analyse the design options for supporting functional consistency and, in order to perform a detailed analysis, we focus on three key capabilities: communication between digital pound ecosystem participants, funds locking, and interoperability across digital pounds and commercial bank money. We explore these key capabilities via three payments use cases: person-to-person push payment, merchant-initiated request to pay, and lock funds and pay on physical delivery. We then present and evaluate the suitability of design options to provide the specific capabilities for each use case and draw initial insights. We conclude that a financial market infrastructure (FMI) providing specific capabilities could simplify the experience of ecosystem participants, simplify the operating platforms for both the Bank of England and digital pound Payment Interface Providers (PIPs), and facilitate the creation of innovative services. We also identify potential next steps.
Paper Structure (102 sections, 30 figures)

This paper contains 102 sections, 30 figures.

Figures (30)

  • Figure 1: Summary of our preliminary evaluation of the suitability of the design options to support each specific capability.
  • Figure 2: Sequence diagram for design option 'Provided by PIPs over peer-to-peer channel using a TSP' (U1.S1.D1).
  • Figure 3: Sequence diagram for design option 'Provided by PIPs via a TSP' (U1.S1.D2).
  • Figure 4: Sequence diagram for design option 'Provided by the digital pound alias service provider' (U1.S1.D3).
  • Figure 5: Sequence diagram for design option 'Provided by PIPs via the CBDC system' (U1.S1.D4).
  • ...and 25 more figures