(Bloomberg) -- Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said he and Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell don’t expect the U.S. to create a digital currency.
“Chair Powell and I have discussed this -- we both agree that in the near future, in the next five years, we see no need for the Fed to issue a digital currency,” Mnuchin said Thursday at a House Financial Services Committee hearing in Washington.
Some other central banks, including the People’s Bank of China, have discussed creating digital currencies. The European Central Bank is examining whether to develop its own digital currency if the private sector can’t make payments across borders faster and cheaper.
Mnuchin said he and Powell talk weekly, including at a meeting of the Financial Stability Oversight Committee on Wednesday, and had a conversation earlier Thursday on repo markets.
Mnuchin’s comment on digital currencies came in response to a lawmaker’s question that referred to a cryptocurrency under development by Facebook Inc (NASDAQ:FB). and China creating its own digital token.
Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) surprised global regulators and policy makers earlier this year with its announcement that it would create a cryptocurrency called Libra. While the social networking company has explained that its digital coin could help financial systems open up to the world’s poor and underbanked, others have raised concern about its potential for being used by terrorists or other criminals.
“I’m fine if Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) wants to create a digital currency, but they need to be fully compliant” with bank secrecy and anti-money laundering rules, Mnuchin said. “In no way can this be used for terrorist financing.”
Mnuchin said that he has had a dozen meetings with Facebook (NASDAQ:FB), going through regulatory concerns, which has slowed down the company’s progress.