Categories: News

Before Congress, federal regulators dispute US pace on national digital currency

Speaking before Congress, OCC head Brian Brooks describes the importance of digital asset innovation and the private sector.

Amid a global race toward central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, the United States needs to focus on the private sector, says Acting Comptroller of the Currency Brian Brooks. 

“We have built private stablecoins in this country that already have a market cap in the tens of billions of dollars,” Brooks said in a U.S. House Committee on Financial Services hearing on Thursday. Formerly head of Coinbase’s legal department, Brooks currently leads the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, or OCC, which is the Treasury office that regulates federal banks. “These things are transacting daily, they are growing rapidly, and they are used for broad commercial purposes,” he explained, adding:

“I don’t think in this country we need to wait to build a command and control government solution. I think the private sector is on it, and I think the role of the regulators on this panel is to provide a framework to make sure there aren’t bank runs or other problems that consumers would be affected by.”

The congressional committee gathered digitally today, questioning four witnesses from leading financial regulators.

Brook’s comments came in response to questions from Minnesota representative Tom Emmer. Emmer noted the fintech sector’s promise and regulatory bodies, persons and actions that have fostered the sector’s growth.

Emmer also pointed toward the OCC and its recent actions, which include clarity on crypto custody by banks. Under Brooks’ purview, the OCC provided two key clarities for banks in the crypto space this year, allowing crypto custody by banks, as well as approving banks to custody stablecoin reserves.

Leading into his main question for Brooks, Emmer referenced Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s antipathy toward private development of digital assets. “Chairman Powell informed us in a previous committee hearing that private sector individuals and innovations may not have a place in the Fed’s consideration of a digital dollar,” Emmer said. “This is concerning.”

“As a country, we haven’t yet recognized the important competitiveness aspect of this,” Brooks told Emmer of digital asset growth. He cited China’s current work and experimentation on its CBDC:

“In this country we’re still years away from a national, real-time payment system. I come to the conclusion that you come to, which is that the best solution is to win the way America has always won, which is by unleashing the power of our innovative, dynamic, risk-taking private sector.”

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