PaymentsJournal
No Result
View All Result
SIGN UP
  • Commercial
  • Credit
  • Debit
  • Digital Assets & Crypto
  • Digital Banking
  • Emerging Payments
  • Fraud & Security
  • Merchant
  • Prepaid
PaymentsJournal
  • Commercial
  • Credit
  • Debit
  • Digital Assets & Crypto
  • Digital Banking
  • Emerging Payments
  • Fraud & Security
  • Merchant
  • Prepaid
No Result
View All Result
PaymentsJournal
No Result
View All Result

CBDCs: Potentially Circumventing Financial Sanctions

By Steve Murphy
March 3, 2022
in Analysts Coverage, Digital Assets & Crypto, Digital Currency
0
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
CBDCs: Potentially Circumventing Financial Sanctions?

CBDCs: Potentially Circumventing Financial Sanctions?

This piece in OMFIF presents a bit of a different take on the potential impact of using payment rails as a deterrent (or punishment) for state aggression. As the world has become more economically interdependent during the past 20 years, so has the need to have access to cross-border payment rails. One of the more widely used networks for business to business (and bank to bank, etc.) payments or funds movement is SWIFT, which has cut off some of Russia’s largest banks. SWIFT is a financial messaging system, but is the underlying method for clearing much of the world’s cross-border commerce. The author suggests that CBDCs can undermine such actions.

‘Removing Russian participants from Swift and the dollar payments network will deal a powerful blow to Russia’s economy, but the power of the measure may soon start to wane as cross-border CBDC networks become an urgent priority…

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has triggered a wave of sanctions on individuals and financial institutions from the West. The traditional hallmarks are there — restrictions on purchases of Russian debt, trading restrictions — as well as some new ones, like asset freezes on central bank foreign exchange reserves…

The decision to lock (most) Russian institutions out of Swift was a contentious one but something of a red herring. In and of itself, Swift is not a payments network. It simply carries the messages used to describe payments. That means that Russia can use other messaging services to send payments, although these are slow or not well-used and many of their counterparties will be unwilling to deal with them because of other sanctions.’

This is a more long-term potential issue, since there are only a couple of ‘live’ CBDCs currently in use, the most widely transacted version being the e-yuan, which we recently commented upon. These and the many dozens of others being piloted or researched across the globe (including the e-dollar, which is likely at least two years away) are retail versions, not wholesale, so not built for purpose in the B2B space. The real point is that bad actors can always find alternatives, especially given some time and innovation. This is a complicated space and we’ll be keeping an eye on it.

‘The West will still be able to forbid banks from trading with sanctioned counterparties, but key trading partners may decide to do so anyway. Network effects matter for trading blocs, so too much fragmentation is bad for business. The result may well be a split — the US and Europe on one side and a Sino-Russian alternative on the other. As serious challengers emerge to Swift’s platform and the Fed’s clearing networks, the threat of prohibiting access will lose its sting.’

Overview by Steve Murphy, Director, Commercial and Enterprise Payments Advisory Service at Mercator Advisory Group

0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Tags: B2BB2B PaymentsBankBanksCBDCCentral Bank Digital CurrencyDigital CurrencyRussiaSwift

    Get the Latest News and Insights Delivered Daily

    Subscribe to the PaymentsJournal Newsletter for exclusive insight and data from Javelin Strategy & Research analysts and industry professionals.

    Must Reads

    Payment Facilitator

    The Payment Facilitator Model as a Growth Strategy for ISVs

    February 4, 2026
    Simplifying Payment Processing? Payment Orchestration Can Help , multi-acquiring merchants

    Multi-Acquiring Is the New Standard—Are Merchants Ready?

    February 3, 2026
    ACH Network, credit-push fraud, ACH payments growth

    What’s Driving the Rapid Growth in ACH Payments

    February 2, 2026
    chatgpt payments

    How Merchants Should Navigate the Rise of Agentic AI

    January 30, 2026
    fraud passkey

    Why the Future of Financial Fraud Prevention Is Passwordless

    January 29, 2026
    payments AI

    When Can Payments Trust AI?

    January 28, 2026
    Contactless Payment Acceptance Multiplies for Merchants: cashless payment, Disputed Transactions and Fraud, Merchant Bill of Rights

    How Merchants Can Tap Into Support from the World’s Largest Payments Ecosystem

    January 27, 2026
    digital banking

    Digital Transformation and the Challenge of Differentiation for FIs

    January 26, 2026

    Linkedin-in X-twitter
    • Commercial
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Digital Banking
    • Commercial
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Digital Banking
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Sign Up for Our Newsletter
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Sign Up for Our Newsletter

    ©2024 PaymentsJournal.com |  Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

    • Commercial Payments
    • Credit
    • Debit
    • Digital Assets & Crypto
    • Emerging Payments
    • Fraud & Security
    • Merchant
    • Prepaid
    No Result
    View All Result