The European Union has been actively preparing for what it envisions as the future of money. In the past year, it finalized its landmark comprehensive crypto legislation, the Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), which is due to take effect in 2024 after closing its second consultation in October.
It has also made progress in its plan to introduce a central bank digital currency (CBDC), which is coming to fruition as the “digital euro.” De Nederlandsche Bank, the central bank of the Netherlands, has described it simply as an “electronic form of public money - the coins and notes in our wallets.”
Many local regulators are embracing the digital euro and touting its potential benefits, though not everyone is on board. In a recent survey out of Spain, 65% of Spaniards said they were not interested in using the digital euro.
Slovakia’s parliament even passed a measure in June that amended its constitution to codify a citizen’s right to pay for goods and services with cash in the face of the impending digital currency.
In Germany, one local politician is not only against the digital euro but is offering another digital solution for a financial revolution: Bitcoin (BTC).
Cointelegraph spoke with Joana Cotar, a member of the Bundestag — the German federal parliament — and a Bitcoin activist, about her take on the digital euro and why she believes in the benefits of Bitcoin.
Cotar has been outspoken on her stance on the EU’s digital monetary solution, which she told Cointelegraph is that of “a staunch opponent of the digital euro.”
"Nobody needs the digital euro,” says Member of Germany’s Parliament while wearing a #Bitcoin T-shirt. pic.twitter.com/Rw4qdeKE0h
She said a digital euro could allow central banks to set an “upper
Read more on cointelegraph.com