Treasury Releases Three Reports on Digital Assets


Following up on President Biden’s recent executive order on digital assets, the US Treasury Department recently announced the publication of three reports on digital assets.  The reports address issues relating to The Future of Money and PaymentsImplications for Consumers, Investors, and Businesses; and an Action Plan to Address Illicit Financing Risks of Digital Assets.

The first report, on the future of money and payments, is focused primarily on development of a US central bank digital currency, or US CBDC. It makes four recommendations for future action: (1) advance work on a possible US CBDC, in case one is determined to be in the national interest, (2) encourage use of instant payment systems to support a more competitive, efficient, and inclusive US payment landscape, (3) establish a federal framework for payments regulation to protect users and the financial system, while supporting responsible innovations in payments, and (4) prioritize efforts to improve cross-border payments, both to enhance payment system efficiency and protect national security. The report also emphasizes the need to achieve these outcomes in coordination with other jurisdictions around the world, including:

The second report, on the implications for consumers, investors, and businesses, surveys the crypto marketplace, discusses uses cases and market trends, and describes various risk factors associated with digital assets. The second report pays special attention to risks that may disproportionately affect those whom the report describes as “populations vulnerable to disparate impacts.” It too concludes with a series of recommendations:

The final report is focused primarily on regulatory enforcement activities involving illicit financing activities that make use of digital assets. It identifies three broad categories of illicit financing risks: money laundering, sanction evasion through techniques generally described as “proliferation financing,” and terrorist financing. The report describes prior US government efforts to mitigate these risks.  It then lays out seven generally categories for future “priority actions”:

The final report concludes with a series of questions Treasury hopes to use to inform future regulatory conversations regarding digital asset supervision and regulation.


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National Law Review, Volume XII, Number 263