On Thursday, Congress reviewed US regulations for digital wallets, lawmakers were particularly focussed on E-Cash and the roles of data privacy and consumer protections.
The hearing focused primarily on Representative Stephen Lynch’s (D-MA) new E-CASH bill. The bill requests the Treasury to issue digital hardware that provides a user experience resembling cash as much as possible. Practically, that would mean a ledger that is locked and gives full privacy.
Lynch heads the Task Force on Financial Technology, a sub-group of the House Financial Services Committee that hosted the hearing. Lynch calls it a good sign for the bill as “the chair of the full committee, Representative Maxine Waters (D-CA), scheduled such a hearing just after its introduction.”
Lynch said the bill has gained some attention since the ‘unexpected quarter.’ He said, “There’s something else on the monitoring side that has to give up data in every transaction, or rub me in the wrong way in terms of establishing an account.”
However, Task Force ranking member Warren Davidson (R-OH) admitted that he was still studying the proposal and did not agree or disagree.
Davidson said one of the main concerns for the democratic side of the aisle is how to quickly fund people without a bank account. He further says, “I don’t know if his idea can do that easily, because I have to give this hardware to someone. If I can give this hardware, why can’t I actually give cash?”
Bill Foster (D-IL) from the Financial Services Commission was also not committed to the proposal.
Foster stressed upon the need to understand the technology behind it. He said offline trading is very difficult.
Foster commented that security challenges are really different. This is because in case of double payments, trusted hardware is required and not reliable collaboration on the Internet. Foster said ‘it will work for value trading’.
Lynch said the current bill leaves technical details to a trial program with the Treasury.
Along with Lynch’s suggestions, the hearing was also keen on a payment service providers like Google, Apple, Paypal, Block, Zelle, and Digital Asset Wallet. Stablecoin being the focus of the subject.
Raúl Carillo, a Fellow at Yale University helped draft the ECASH Act. Carillo pointed at the inadequate consumer protections for current digital payments.
Carillo also stressed upon the fact that digital wallets generally hold pass-through, rather than FDIC, insurance.
He states in his testimony, “This is not a direct relationship between the consumer and the bank. It does not protect against the obstacles of wallet providers and coin issuers, it only protects against the obstacles of banks, so that is not enough.”
Crypto regulation has been the subject of concern for the Biden administration of late, with comments from authorities coming in almost the other day.
Just recently a bipartisan group of lawmakers in Washington introduced an updated bill to bring regulations on cryptocurrency developers, dealers, exchanges and stablecoin providers under CFTC.