Malaysia’s central bank actively assessing CBDC options

Malaysia’s central bank recently completed a proof-of-concept for a CBDC with three other nations and may consider developing its own 

cross-border payment system using the blockchain.

Malaysia has joined the growing cadre of nations that are exploring the value of researching and developing a central bank digital currency (CBDC).

Malaysia’s central bank, Bank Negara Malaysia, stated to Bloomberg on Monday that while a decision about exactly how to move forward 

with a CBDC has not yet been determined, it has focused research on a CBDC “via proof-of-concept and experimentation to enhance our 

technical and policy capabilities.”

It also stated that the ostensible reason for the current research effort was to ensure it is prepared to launch a CBDC program “should the 

need to issue CBDC arise in the future.”

In 2021, Malaysia collaborated with South Africa, Australia and Southeast Asian neighbor Singapore to develop a proof-of-concept CBDC pilot 

called Project Dunbar, according to a joint announcement. Project Dunbar utilized the Corda and Quorum blockchain platforms from r3 and 

ConsenSys, respectively, to demonstrate various capabilities of blockchain-based cross-border remittances. Most notably, it aimed to demonstrate 

how blockchain technology could “eliminate the need for intermediaries and cut the time and cost of transactions.”

An increasing number of nations are researching how a CBDC program would operate in their jurisdiction. China is by far the largest nation currently 

executing a CBDC pilot program, dubbed the digital yuan, and the mobile app already has over 20 million downloads since Jan. 4. China plans to 

launch the program and allow international visitors to access the digital yuan with their passports during the upcoming Winter Olympics in Beijing next month.

Related: CBDCs and stablecoins: EY advises banks to ‘prepare for what’s coming’

The Eastern Caribbean Central Bank (ECCB) rolled out its finalized CBDC, called the “EC dollar,” in March 2021. As of December 2021, Antigua was the last 

of eight jurisdictions in the ECCB not to have adopted the EC dollar. Nearby Jamaica also plans on launching a finalized CBDC by Q1 2022 following a successful 

pilot program, which concluded two weeks ago.

Retrived from https://cointelegraph.com/news/malaysia-s-central-bank-actively-assessing-cbdc-options?_ga=2.183384358.1030396395.1642559082-1416573066.1642061684 (18 Jan,2022)