China has gradually rolled out tests of a CBDC for the last couple of years and payment has been available in Digital Yuan at many stores in cities like Shanghai for the last year. It's still a small portion of the currency (around 0.1%) but is the best case study of a CBDC in action with something like 100 million users.
People in China are already used to ubiquitous payment using digital means, so there is already competition from payment providers like Wechat and Alipay that offer very good and sophisticated user experience. Canada doesn't have that, but in Canada people are so used to paying with credit as opposed to paying with cash that it might be even tougher to get adoption with a digital cash alternative. A sophisticated approach could create a lot of incentives for participating by taking lessons from DeFi while providing the risk assurance of government backing, but I imagine that would be a ways off for Canada to even consider.
Personally, I think it would be great to have a government provided digital wallet with a secure digital currency capable of removing banks as an intermediary, but I'm sure it would face pushback and political pressure from industry if it does remove some of the need for banks.
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"If stupidity got us into this mess, then why can't it get us out?"
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