Cryptocurrencies are now recognised as actual money for many people in the Internet world, for buying software, game, link building and others digital business, recently The European Central Bank (ECB) stated that cryptocurrencies do not have implications on monetary policy or factor into the real economy in a May report.
In the European Central Bank report dubbed "Crypto-Assets: Implications for financial stability, monetary policy, and payments and market infrastructures," ECB looks into the potential impact of digital currencies on economic developments and monetary policy.
The central bank specifically states that such implications could occur should cryptocurrencies became a credible substitute for cash and deposits, while currently they do not fulfil the functions of money.
The European Central bank further says that cryptocurrencies' deployment remains limited, with a very small number of merchants ready to allow purchases of goods and services with digital currency, as the prices of digital assets remain volatile. And not so friendly user for early adapters
However, the ECB notes that the development of stablecoins — the value of which is pegged to physical assets, fiat currencies, or is stabilized by an algorithm — warrants continuous monitoring because they could become less volatile if collateralized by central bank reserves. Maybe the volatility is the main point of the currency
As reported before, Finally, the bank argues that "the absence of any specific institution (such as a central bank or monetary authority) protecting the value of crypto-assets hinders their use as a form of money, since their volatility:
a) prevents their use as a store of value;
b) discourages their use as a means of payment; and
c) makes it difficult to use them as a unit of account."
Earlier in May, ECB president Mario Draghi said that cryptocurrencies "are not significant enough in their entity that they could affect our economies in a macro way," adding:
"Cryptocurrencies or bitcoins, or anything like that, are not really currencies — they are assets. A euro is a euro — today, tomorrow, in a month — it's always a euro. And the ECB is behind the euro. Who is behind the cryptocurrencies? So they are very, very risky assets."
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