ECB Says Digital Euro Critical to Safeguard Europe’s Monetary Autonomy
The European Central Bank (ECB) has emphasized that the digital euro is essential for protecting Europe’s monetary autonomy, warning on March 20 that growing digital payment systems and foreign alternatives could weaken the euro’s role in the financial system.
Philip R. Lane, an ECB Executive Board Member, shared the central bank’s position during a speech at the University College Cork Economics Society Conference.
Digital Euro Seen as Guardrail Against Declining Cash Use
Lane warned that the rising shift toward electronic payments, stablecoins, and foreign digital currencies risks diminishing the influence of central bank money in Europe’s financial framework.
He argued that a digital euro would ensure continued public access to central bank-issued money and safeguard the euro’s role in anchoring the region’s monetary and financial stability.
Lane cautioned that declining cash use threatens the balance between central bank money and commercial bank deposits. Without a digital euro, public access to central bank money could diminish, potentially weakening the ECB’s ability to stabilize the monetary system and uphold price stability.
“The absence of such a monetary anchor could slow down and fragment the web of daily transactions that form the modern-day multi-trillion payment system,” Lane said.
He also highlighted the growing influence of stablecoins and private digital currencies, which operate outside central bank oversight and could reduce the euro’s role in domestic transactions.
Lane noted that euro-based stablecoins backed by commercial bank reserves would shift transaction dominance away from banks, while foreign-currency stablecoins could deepen Europe’s exposure to other nations’ monetary systems.
“A growing prevalence of digital dollarisation would undermine monetary sovereignty by compromising the ability to control the unit of account within its jurisdiction,” he said.
Global Experiment for State-Backed Digital Currencies
The ECB also expressed concern over Europe’s reliance on non-European payment platforms, warning that dominance by international card schemes and tech companies leaves critical financial infrastructure vulnerable to external control.
Lane said the digital euro would counter these risks by providing a public, secure alternative in digital payments. It would support Europe’s strategic autonomy, reduce reliance on foreign providers, and strengthen the euro’s role globally.
“Following a prudent risk management approach, introducing a digital euro would minimise the likelihood of adverse economic outcomes in the future and ensure the resilience of our monetary system in an increasingly digital world,” he said.
Globally, central banks have accelerated efforts to explore digital currencies as they assess the long-term implications of digital finance on monetary policy. China and several emerging economies have already made progress in rolling out central bank digital currencies.
At the same time, regulators worldwide continue to debate how to manage the growing use of private digital currencies and stablecoins, which could reshape payment systems and reduce governments’ control over national monetary systems if left unchecked.