This chapter examines the global regulatory landscape for tokenized money, analysing how jurisdictions assess the legal desirability of central bank digital currencies, tokenized deposits, and stablecoins. Legal desirability is defined as the systematic evaluation determining whether novel monetary payment instruments should be introduced and under what conditions. Analysing extensive documentation from international organisations and major jurisdictions during 2024-2025, the research reveals a fundamental paradox: technological convergence around distributed ledger technology masks profound regulatory divergence across legal frameworks, institutional designs, and monetary sovereignty priorities. While most central banks are exploring CBDCs, implementation strategies vary dramatically – from the EU’s coordinated digital euro advancement, to US retail CBDC prohibition alongside stablecoin legalisation, to diverse Asia-Pacific implementations. Three convergent patterns emerge: wholesale CBDC experimentation for cross-border settlement, tokenized deposits as bank-issued money under existing frameworks, and comprehensive stablecoin regulation. Rather than a single dominant model, evidence reveals a multi-form monetary architecture featuring the coexistence of wholesale CBDCs, tokenized deposits, and regulated stablecoins serving distinct use cases.

The Tokenization Of Money: Mapping The Global Regulatory Landscape and The Legal Desirability Question / Zatti, Filippo. - ELETTRONICO. - 1:(2026), pp. 61-79. [10.82018/9791221183467-5]

The Tokenization Of Money: Mapping The Global Regulatory Landscape and The Legal Desirability Question

Zatti, Filippo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
2026

Abstract

This chapter examines the global regulatory landscape for tokenized money, analysing how jurisdictions assess the legal desirability of central bank digital currencies, tokenized deposits, and stablecoins. Legal desirability is defined as the systematic evaluation determining whether novel monetary payment instruments should be introduced and under what conditions. Analysing extensive documentation from international organisations and major jurisdictions during 2024-2025, the research reveals a fundamental paradox: technological convergence around distributed ledger technology masks profound regulatory divergence across legal frameworks, institutional designs, and monetary sovereignty priorities. While most central banks are exploring CBDCs, implementation strategies vary dramatically – from the EU’s coordinated digital euro advancement, to US retail CBDC prohibition alongside stablecoin legalisation, to diverse Asia-Pacific implementations. Three convergent patterns emerge: wholesale CBDC experimentation for cross-border settlement, tokenized deposits as bank-issued money under existing frameworks, and comprehensive stablecoin regulation. Rather than a single dominant model, evidence reveals a multi-form monetary architecture featuring the coexistence of wholesale CBDCs, tokenized deposits, and regulated stablecoins serving distinct use cases.
2026
9791221118155
9791221183467
The Tokenized Economy Regulatory Challenges and Interdisciplinary Responses
61
79
Zatti, Filippo
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Pages from 9791221183467-3_Zatti_1.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Pdf editoriale (Version of record)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 796.65 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
796.65 kB Adobe PDF

I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/1458613
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact