Senate housing bill bars Fed from issuing or facilitating a retail CBDC, including similar digital assets, until 2030.
Measure passed 84–6 after late insertion, formalizing limits despite prior Fed stance requiring Congress approval.
U.S. pauses digital dollar plans as China and Europe advance CBDC efforts and stablecoins dominate payments.
A long-dormant ban on a U.S. central bank digital currency resurfaced in Congress this week through an unexpected legislative route. According to Eleanor Terrett, the provision appeared in the Senate Banking Committee’s 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act, released minutes before a vote. The measure restricts the Federal Reserve from issuing a retail CBDC through 2030.
The amendment bars the Federal Reserve from issuing or facilitating a retail CBDC, directly or through intermediaries. Notably, the language also blocks “substantially similar” digital assets. The restriction sunsets on December 31, 2030.
The provision did not appear in last year’s National Defense Authorization Act, despite earlier efforts by House conservatives. However, lawmakers later inserted it into the housing bill. The Senate passed the measure by an 84–6 vote.
Journalist Burgess Everett noted on X that such margins rarely appear in Senate votes. However, the CBDC language drew little attention within the broader housing package. According to Eleanor Mueller, House Republicans requested the addition during negotiations.
Although the Federal Reserve has said it would not issue a CBDC without congressional approval, the new language formalizes that restriction. The ban prevents any retail digital dollar initiative until the end of the decade.
Meanwhile, the White House signaled support for the bill. Journalist Brendan Pedersen reported that the administration praised the CBDC restriction in a public statement. The president is expected to sign the legislation.
As a result, the Federal Reserve remains legally constrained, regardless of future policy debates. The wording aims to prevent indirect workarounds through alternative digital instruments.
While the United States pauses, other regions continue exploring digital currencies. China continues testing and expanding its digital yuan. Europe is also advancing research through the European Central Bank.
At home, private stablecoins dominate digital payments. USDC and USDT remain widely used across crypto markets. According to investor Ray Dalio, several global economies continue pursuing greater state control through digital currencies.
For now, the U.S. position remains fixed. The housing bill locks federal policy on retail CBDCs until 2030, following a largely unnoticed legislative shift.
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