Payments

The payments landscape for community banks is changing rapidly as traditional payments converge with new instant payment systems and emerging cryptocurrencies. It is critical for Community Banks to maintain awareness of developments in the payments space to assess new opportunities, mitigate risks, and ensure that their payment strategy aligns with overall business plans.

Payments Access, Choice, and Governance

Apr 14, 2021, 10:22 AM
Title : Payments Access, Choice, and Governance
mainURLExternal :
Categories : Payments
Payments Access

Letters and Testimonies

Apr 9, 2021, 14:13 PM
Title : Letters and Testimonies
mainURLExternal :
Categories : ICBA Education
Letters and Testimony

Payments Strategy Guide

Apr 7, 2021, 11:55 AM
Title : Payments Strategy Guide
mainURLExternal :
Categories : Payments
Payments
Related pages :

Credit Card and Debit Cards, Card Regulation, and Other Related Topics

Mar 31, 2021, 15:44 PM
Title : Credit Card and Debit Cards, Card Regulation, and Other Related Topics
mainURLExternal :
Categories : ICBA Education
Online Training
Related pages : Online Training

Payments News

ICBA opposes U.S. central bank digital currency

May 23, 2022

ICBA expressed opposition to the establishment of a U.S. central bank digital currency. In a comment letter to the Federal Reserve, ICBA said a U.S. CBDC would introduce significant privacy and cybersecurity risks into the nation’s monetary system and disrupt U.S. banking stability.

News Release: “While ICBA supports the Federal Reserve’s efforts to ensure the U.S. payments and monetary system remains modern and competitive, a U.S. CBDC would introduce costs and risks far exceeding any benefits to consumers, small businesses and the broader economy,” ICBA President and CEO Rebeca Romero Rainey said in a national news release.

Comment Letter: In its comment letter responding to the Fed’s CBDC consultation paper, ICBA said:

  • A U.S. CBDC would obstruct the ability of banks to take deposits and make loans, pose privacy and cybersecurity risks, provide a gateway to direct-to-consumer Fed accounts, and damage the Fed’s ability to conduct monetary policy, among other risks.

  • A U.S. CBDC would not yield benefits more effectively than alternative methods, which the Fed states is a prerequisite to creating a CBDC.

  • Alternatives—including deposit accounts and faster payments options—can more effectively achieve the Fed’s policy goals.

  • As financial intermediaries and the nation’s leading small-business lenders, community banks’ access to deposits and ability to lend funds to support economic growth and development would be dramatically affected by the creation of a competitively advantaged CBDC.

  • The Fed should not proceed without explicit statutory authorization and oversight from Congress because the authority to issue a CBDC does not exist under current law.

Next: The House Financial Services Committee is scheduled to meet this Thursday for a hearing on the benefits and risks of a U.S. CBDC.