In August 2020, the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, in collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, announced that it would research and test leading technologies to determine design requirements for a US-based central bank digital currency. Jim Cunha, senior vice-president, secure payments and fintech, at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, discusses this initiative as well as the wider impact of distributed ledger technology on the financial system. The meeting also covers national efforts to increase security and reduce payment fraud in the US.
The productivity question: working from home during Covid-19
In conversation with the governor: Benjamin Diokno, governor of the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
Ahead of the ECB
Emerging market capital flows after Covid-19
Fiscal policies to tackle climate catastrophe in Asia Pacific
In focus: Developments in digital payments
Modernising corporate and governmental ESG credentials
In focus: SPI symposium
Sovereign debt sustainability after Covid-19
Requirements for a fully functional CBDC
How the Bank of Korea got through Covid-19
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Ahead of the ECB
ECB and the future of monetary policy
AP3’s Hamnmark on Covid-19, monetary policy and ESG
The role of just transition in developing sustainable cities
CalPERS on the global Covid-19 response and emerging market fixed income
Second quarter in focus
Euro area financial stability in the Covid-19 recovery
Comparing Chinese and Anglo-American public pension system
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