Zürcher Nachrichten - ECB's digital euro sparks flurry of online misinformation

EUR -
AED 4.204206
AFN 79.45975
ALL 98.530491
AMD 439.538136
ANG 2.04879
AOA 1050.34385
ARS 1351.723321
AUD 1.762561
AWG 2.062036
AZN 1.959682
BAM 1.959987
BBD 2.309835
BDT 139.788631
BGN 1.95659
BHD 0.431602
BIF 3405.374921
BMD 1.144781
BND 1.471945
BOB 7.933017
BRL 6.496609
BSD 1.143944
BTN 97.698714
BWP 15.355939
BYN 3.743798
BYR 22437.699777
BZD 2.297909
CAD 1.570467
CDF 3279.796713
CHF 0.934696
CLF 0.028017
CLP 1075.1323
CNY 8.24734
CNH 8.250668
COP 4730.256338
CRC 580.640425
CUC 1.144781
CUP 30.336686
CVE 110.501064
CZK 24.870387
DJF 203.450314
DKK 7.46002
DOP 67.414017
DZD 150.695462
EGP 56.866521
ERN 17.171709
ETB 155.947714
FJD 2.570891
FKP 0.850003
GBP 0.844791
GEL 3.136508
GGP 0.850003
GHS 11.726256
GIP 0.850003
GMD 82.424699
GNF 9913.177574
GTQ 8.785769
GYD 239.335475
HKD 8.980271
HNL 29.805674
HRK 7.531058
HTG 149.749912
HUF 403.208327
IDR 18655.115716
ILS 4.031774
IMP 0.850003
INR 97.725512
IQD 1498.60147
IRR 48223.882738
ISK 144.42515
JEP 0.850003
JMD 182.650197
JOD 0.811651
JPY 163.266258
KES 147.802935
KGS 100.111038
KHR 4573.81101
KMF 497.412057
KPW 1030.302773
KRW 1576.442949
KWD 0.350933
KYD 0.953345
KZT 585.330445
LAK 24706.997513
LBP 102500.467666
LKR 342.672052
LRD 228.21954
LSL 20.520839
LTL 3.380239
LVL 0.692466
LYD 6.236323
MAD 10.531498
MDL 19.745355
MGA 5191.089753
MKD 61.510256
MMK 2403.418277
MNT 4091.433442
MOP 9.243007
MRU 45.300776
MUR 52.339496
MVR 17.698259
MWK 1983.637656
MXN 21.991401
MYR 4.872756
MZN 73.162675
NAD 20.520839
NGN 1812.668273
NIO 42.099938
NOK 11.530385
NPR 156.317943
NZD 1.89367
OMR 0.440168
PAB 1.143954
PEN 4.140044
PGK 4.698036
PHP 63.712766
PKR 322.542048
PLN 4.256291
PYG 9140.526956
QAR 4.181433
RON 5.061422
RSD 117.188878
RUB 90.727077
RWF 1646.245644
SAR 4.294271
SBD 9.559796
SCR 16.807859
SDG 687.442558
SEK 10.909353
SGD 1.471455
SHP 0.899618
SLE 26.009714
SLL 24005.477055
SOS 653.796709
SRD 42.642503
STD 23694.647135
SVC 10.009383
SYP 14884.269284
SZL 20.512822
THB 37.239821
TJS 11.439939
TMT 4.012456
TND 3.402368
TOP 2.681188
TRY 44.85196
TTD 7.768596
TWD 34.344223
TZS 3076.601326
UAH 47.674748
UGX 4165.899634
USD 1.144781
UYU 47.52152
UZS 14632.258973
VES 108.578462
VND 29797.49426
VUV 137.707671
WST 3.167618
XAF 657.361324
XAG 0.033041
XAU 0.000338
XCD 3.093827
XDR 0.821455
XOF 657.361324
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.154775
ZAR 20.444059
ZMK 10304.399564
ZMW 30.593625
ZWL 368.618886
  • SCS

    -0.1250

    10.18

    -1.23%

  • RBGPF

    3.5700

    69

    +5.17%

  • RELX

    0.6600

    54.57

    +1.21%

  • CMSC

    -0.1400

    22.08

    -0.63%

  • GSK

    0.6350

    41.66

    +1.52%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    10.4

    +0.58%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    71.93

    -1.25%

  • RIO

    0.1700

    59.58

    +0.29%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    11.88

    +1.94%

  • NGG

    0.4800

    71.9

    +0.67%

  • BCE

    0.4950

    22.28

    +2.22%

  • CMSD

    -0.0482

    22.07

    -0.22%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    12.95

    +0.15%

  • BCC

    -1.5000

    85.12

    -1.76%

  • BTI

    0.2400

    45.39

    +0.53%

  • BP

    0.4900

    29.58

    +1.66%

ECB's digital euro sparks flurry of online misinformation
ECB's digital euro sparks flurry of online misinformation / Photo: Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV - AFP/File

ECB's digital euro sparks flurry of online misinformation

European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde's recent remarks on a "digital euro" prompted a fresh wave of misinformation online, highlighting an uphill battle ahead to convince the public of the project's merits.

Text size:

The decision to create a digital euro -- essentially an electronic form of cash backed by the ECB -- has not been made yet and any possible launch would be years away.

But when Lagarde in a press conference this month referenced an October 2025 deadline for moving to the next stage of preparations, social media lit up with alarmed messages that the launch was imminent.

Harald Vilimsky, a member of the European Parliament from Austria's far-right Freedom Party (FPOe), was among those posting that the ECB "wants to introduce the digital euro in October", an incorrect claim that spread in several languages.

The claim was echoed on X by Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, the eurosceptic head of the Rise Up France party, who added that the project was "madness for our freedoms".

Other widely shared posts repeated misconceptions that have long dogged the project: that a digital euro would mean the "end of cash" or be used for financial surveillance, allowing the ECB to "block" or "track" payments or "access savings".

"Your money will no longer be yours," alleged a French TikTok video shared more than 15,000 times.

The falsehoods circulating online reveal a broader "mistrust of centralised institutions", said Vicky Van Eyck, executive director of campaign group Positive Money Europe.

Recent comments by French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen about investment needs were similarly misused in viral posts that falsely claimed people's savings would be taken from them.

- 'Strategic autonomy' -

The ECB and dozens of other central banks worldwide are exploring or putting in place central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) as cash use declines.

Conspiracy theories about governments planning cashless societies as way of controlling citizens have proliferated since the Covid-19 pandemic, but ECB officials have been at pains to stress that a digital euro would complement cash -- not replace it.

Issued by the ECB, the money would be risk-free. It would be held in a digital wallet and payments could be made online or offline, allowing for cash-like anonymity. The ECB says it would not be able to directly link transactions to specific individuals.

In making the case for a digital euro, the ECB argues that it would bolster Europe's "strategic autonomy".

A digital euro would allow for direct money transfers between users, offering a pan-European payment service that could reduce reliance on US payment giants such as Mastercard, Visa, Apple Pay or PayPal.

"This dependence exposes Europe to risks of economic pressure and coercion," ECB chief economist Philip Lane warned last week, in a nod to transatlantic tensions under US President Donald Trump.

Lane said a digital euro could also counter the influence of increasingly popular dollar-backed "stablecoins" -- private digital currencies that are pegged to the US dollar and could undermine the euro if widely adopted in Europe.

- Challenges -

Some observers remain critical.

Ignazio Angeloni, a former ECB official and currently a fellow at Milan's Bocconi University, said Europeans already had "a plethora" of easy payment options and weren't necessarily looking for another.

For now, the digital euro discussions were still at a fairly technical stage, Angeloni said, and many members of the public were "not interested".

Van Eyck said interest could be hindered by plans to cap how many digital euros consumers could hold.

An ECB report published in March found that between 2022 and 2024, awareness about the digital euro jumped from 18 to 40 percent among eurozone survey respondents. The potential willingness to use it remained below 50 percent.

The decision to issue a digital euro will only come once European Union legislation is in place, but progress in Brussels has been slow.

If adopted, a digital euro would be introduced from mid-2027 or 2028 at the earliest, officials told AFP.

Good communication with the public will be key to its success, said Van Eyck.

"The big issue with not having the public on board is that the digital euro could flop," she said.

A.Senn--NZN