Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey denied that lobbying by Nigel Farage influenced the central bank's approach to a potential central bank digital currency. The statement came after Bailey met Farage to discuss several topics, including cryptocurrencies, and follows Farage's resignation from his parliamentary seat this week. Bailey said the central bank is 'able to spot' attempts to influence its policymaking and confirmed that 'no policy changes have taken place as a result of interventions by Mr. Farage.' The denial addresses concerns about political pressure on CBDC policy, which sits at the intersection of monetary infrastructure, privacy concerns, and payment innovation in the UK.
Bailey made clear that the Bank of England's work on the digital pound remains independent. 'Following our meeting, Mr. Farage spoke with the press outlining that we had discussed a range of topics, including cryptocurrencies,' Bailey wrote. 'I am happy to confirm that no policy changes have taken place as a result of interventions by Mr. Farage.'
The meeting drew attention because Farage has been one of the most vocal political critics of central bank digital currencies in the UK, framing the proposed digital pound as a risk to financial privacy and personal freedom. Farage, the leader of Reform UK and a prominent Brexit campaigner, has said he would 'rather go to prison' than live under a CBDC system.
Farage resigned his parliamentary seat this week but denied wrongdoing, saying during an X livestream that he has 'not broken the law in any way at all.' Reports indicated that he accepted 'gifts' from individuals with ties to the crypto industry.
The political backdrop adds risk to the Bank of England's digital pound work. CBDCs are already difficult to sell to the public because they require trust in how transaction data would be handled, how access would be controlled, and whether government agencies could use the system beyond its stated purpose.
The Bank of England is still researching a potential digital pound, but no final decision has been made. 'No decision has been made on whether to introduce a digital pound,' the central bank said in a recent update, adding that any launch would require further analysis and public consultation.
The project remains in the design phase as officials assess whether a CBDC is needed in an economy where digital payments, stablecoins, tokenized assets, and private-sector money are expanding. That position gives the Bank room to continue technical work without committing to issuance. It also allows policymakers to address the central concerns around privacy, access, commercial bank deposits, financial stability, and the role of central bank money in retail payments.
The Bank of England is also testing how tokenized assets could be settled using central bank money. Earlier this year, it launched a 6-month pilot involving 18 companies as part of a broader effort to modernize UK financial infrastructure.
That work is separate from a retail digital pound but linked to the same policy question: how central bank money should function in markets where assets, deposits, and payment rails are becoming more digital. Settlement using central bank money could reduce counterparty risk in tokenized markets and support institutional adoption if the framework is clear.
What did Andrew Bailey say about Nigel Farage's influence on digital pound policy?
Bailey confirmed that 'no policy changes have taken place as a result of interventions by Mr. Farage' and stated the Bank of England is 'able to spot' attempts to influence its policymaking.
Has the Bank of England decided to launch a digital pound?
No decision has been made on whether to introduce a digital pound. The central bank said any launch would require further analysis and public consultation, and the project remains in the design phase.
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