Global central banking officials have intensified a coordinated rhetorical offensive against U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins this week. They characterize the digital assets as an existential threat to the “monetary sovereignty” of emerging markets. The public warnings, while focused on criminal utility, internal policy anxieties center on the rapid obsolescence of state-managed capital controls and the “inflation tax.”
- The BIS, IMF, and Bank of England warn that U.S. dollar stablecoins undermine emerging market monetary sovereignty and state-managed capital controls.
- Standard Chartered projects stablecoin savings in developing nations will surge reaching $1.22 trillion by the end of 2028.
- Central bankers fear the loss of seigniorage as stablecoins provide a private exit ramp from local currency inflation and predatory policies.
A report published Monday by the Financial Times detailed a surge in concern among leadership at the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and the Bank of England. BIS General Manager Pablo Hernández de Cos noted that stablecoins “make it easier to evade capital controls” in developing nations.
This sentiment was echoed by IMF official Tobias Adrian, who labelled the assets a direct challenge to sovereign monetary management. Former State Bank of Pakistan governor Reza Baqir said: “I would be extremely nervous about anything that affected capital controls.”
For emerging market central banks, the utility of a domestic currency monopoly is historically tethered to four levers. These include the collection of seigniorage, the imposition of an inflation tax to fund fiscal deficits, the enforcement of capital controls to prevent wealth flight, and total surveillance of the domestic credit cycle.
The Erosion of the Fiat Monopoly
Standard Chartered projected in October 2025 that stablecoin holdings used for savings by emerging-market residents could rise from $173 billion to $1.22 trillion by the end of 2028, implying more than $1 trillion in potential outflows from local bank deposits.
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👉 Submit Your PRThe report referenced broader concerns around illicit finance, noting warnings from the BIS and Financial Action Task Force that stablecoins can facilitate criminal activity. Chainalysis’ 2025 Crypto Crime Report, published in January 2026, recorded $154 billion in total illicit crypto flows for 2025, with stablecoins comprising 84% of that volume.
US policy has supported stablecoin growth. President Donald Trump signed the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act) into law on July 18, 2025, establishing the first federal framework for payment stablecoins with 100% reserve requirements.
Historical Background
The BIS addressed stablecoin risks to financial stability and monetary sovereignty in its June 2025 annual report chapter, stating they fall short as sound money without stronger oversight. An IMF departmental paper from December 2025, co-authored by Tobias Adrian, examined currency substitution pressures in emerging markets with weaker domestic currencies.
Chain Street’s Take
More than a security report, the central bank outcry is a eulogy for the fiat monopoly. Officials are panicked because stablecoins have provided the middle class in failed states with a private-sector exit ramp from predatory monetary policy.
By framing stability-seeking as a “crime threat,” regulators are attempting to preserve the ability to tax their populations through inflation. The data proves the crime angle is a red herring. The real “danger” to central bankers is a world where they must compete for the trust of their own citizens.
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