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4. the central bank gets to decide how much "cash" each individual deserves to have at any given point in time. All of the proposals I've heard set that limit at less than one month's apartment rent in most EU cities. Therefore, this scheme is not competing with any form of money or payment besides coins-and-banknotes. 5. this "cash" has an expiration date, which is chosen at the whim of the central bank. If you stuff it in your mattress like paper cash, it becomes worthless. Therefore, this scheme is a massive step backwards in terms of central bank control over our lives, relative to coins-and-banknotes. If this takes off, it will affect only a small slice of our economic relations, and it will affect that slice for the worse, not for the better. I'm disappointed that Tanja Lange was willing to associate herself with this. |
Btw, I haven't seen anything like an expiration date in the proposals for the Digital Euro [0], could you provide your sources for that claim?
[0] https://www.europarl.europa.eu/legislative-train/theme-an-ec...