cryptocurrency

Curacao-St Maarten central bank signs digital currency memorandum of understanding


WILLEMSTAD, Curacao — The Centrale Bank van Curaçao en Sint Maarten (CBCS) and the Barbados-based fintech company Bitt Inc. have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to explore the feasibility of the CBCS issuing a digital Curacao and St Maarten guilder, to facilitate digital financial payments within the monetary union of Curacao and St Maarten.

The parties signed an MOU on August 3, 2018, representing the culmination of talks that began in April 2018 during the CBCS’ second central banking conference. This MOU solidifies the relationship between Bitt and the CBCS, and outlines the basic framework for this collaborative effort, to determine the way forward.

“The MOU clears the way for collaboration and information sharing regarding a feasibility study, designed to determine the viability and functionality of using a central bank issued digital guilder within the financial ecosystems of each member, and across both members, of the monetary union,” explained Rawdon Adams, CEO of Bitt Inc.

Given that two of the CBCS’ most important objectives are to maintain the external stability of the guilder, and to promote the efficient functioning of the financial system in the countries of Curacao and St Maarten, this MOU is of particular relevance, according to Leila Matroos-Lasten, acting president of the CBCS: “The central bank is determined to address its challenges proactively by exploring the latest technology available, for example, to reduce the level of cash usage within the monetary union, and to facilitate more secure, more AML and KYC compliant, and more efficient financial transactions within and between Curacao and St Maarten.”

“The CBCS herewith recognizes the transformative potential of innovation and technology and is committed to exploring solutions regarding efficiency of cross-jurisdictional transactions and digital payments whilst ensuring compliance and security assurances obtained by these state of the art (fintech) solutions. This would be beneficial to everyone,” Matroos-Lasten added.

“We chose to sign this MOU with Bitt due to this company’s regional experience in digital payments and its macroeconomic views,” she stated.

The MOU with the CBCS marks Bitt’s second MOU with a formal monetary union, the first being with the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU) signed earlier this year.

There are about seven formal currency/monetary unions in existence globally, inclusive of these two in the Caribbean. When asked about this apparent coincidence, CEO of Bitt Inc. Rawdon Adams responded: “A central bank issued digital currency is of particular relevance in a monetary union where member states are separated by long distances – or the ocean – as with the ECCU, and the situation of Curacao and St Maarten, making the Central Bank’s task of printing and distributing physical cash securely across member states that much more challenging and costly. A central bank issued digital currency, which can be used on mobile wallets, facilitates secure and frictionless financial transactions and payments, using a mobile phone / tablet, within each jurisdiction and across jurisdictions in the monetary union. This solution is particularly powerful in the case of cross-border transactions, which can take days even within a monetary union, and the cost of which is only increasing.”

Bitt’s vision, as the region’s premier financial technology company, has been to utilize distributed ledger technology to efficiently and securely issue digital dollars that equate with existing fiat currency, under regulatory oversight.

“We are therefore pleased to sign this MOU with the CBCS, and look forward to the collaboration and results,” Adams added.





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