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As reported by The Telegraph, the Bank of England may support the production of a state-supported digital currency within a year. Just a year ago, the bank declared that it had commissioned a hypothetical money, RS Coin, which could be utilized by national banks to settle payments.

Currently, England’s national bank is raising the stakes, hoping to make its hypothetical idea into a feasible reality.

A research group vetted by the Bank has been examining the likelihood of a national bank-issued cryptographic money since 2015. So as to avert the unpredictability that has come to characterize Bitcoin, the digital money would be supported by the Bank of England and fastened to the pound sterling, Great Britain’s national cash. The Bank expects the research group to report back at some point in 2018 with their discoveries.

Prior to the Christmas, Dr. Stamp Carney, Governor of the Bank of England, put forth the defense for a national bank-sponsored crypto money to England’s Treasury Select Committee. Shielding the thought, he expressed that “The underlying technology is really of a fair bit of interest. We are working with it at the Bank of England.”

“I have taken an interest in discussions with the significant national banks on this issue,” he kept saying that such talks would continue in the new year. He also revealed that, over the summer, the Bank successfully executed a transaction with another bank using blockchain technology.

The Governor added that the Bank and its exploration unit are “restrained” in their approach. “In case we will apply something to the core of the system, it will need to meet five sigma quality rating.”

If the trials are successful, a digital currency banking option could make the way for instant payments for cars, houses, land, and other key assets.

However, Dr. Carney was still careful to address the confinements of a national bank-sponsored digital currency. One such frail point, he admits, is dissolvability if the currency was introduced on a public scale.

England – The Next In Line?

This disclosure makes England the most recent in an extending rundown of countries that have either engaged or endorsed their own cryptographic money.

Recently, Israel declared its own plans for the advanced shekel, the Israeli national bank’s answer for battling bootleg market purchases that include a little more than 20% of Israel’s GDP.

Back in October, Vladimir Putin put Russia on the map as the main country to declare official plans for its own particular state-issued cryptographic money, the digital ruble. Evidently, Russia is engaging the cryptoruble as a way to go around international sanctions.

Venezuela has also declared their own digital money in a comparative endeavor to moderate the effect of approvals from the United States.

Story credit: ccn.com

Image: Google Images