https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/executive-order-14067-ensuring-responsible-development-digital-assets


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Joe Biden
Joseph R. Biden, Jr.
46th President of the United States: 2021—2025
Executive Order 14067—Ensuring Responsible Development of Digital Assets
March 09, 2022
By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws
of the United States of America, it is hereby ordered as follows:

Section 1. Policy. Advances in digital and distributed ledger technology
for financial services have led to dramatic growth in markets for digital
assets, with profound implications for the protection of consumers,
investors, and businesses, including data privacy and security; financial
stability and systemic risk; crime; national security; the ability to
exercise human rights; financial inclusion and equity; and energy demand
and climate change. In November 2021, non-state issued digital assets
reached a combined market capitalization of $3 trillion, up from
approximately $14 billion in early November 2016. Monetary authorities
globally are also exploring, and in some cases introducing, central bank
digital currencies (CBDCs).

While many activities involving digital assets are within the scope of
existing domestic laws and regulations, an area where the United States has
been a global leader, growing development and adoption of digital assets
and related innovations, as well as inconsistent controls to defend against
certain key risks, necessitate an evolution and alignment of the United
States Government approach to digital assets. The United States has an
interest in responsible financial innovation, expanding access to safe and
affordable financial services, and reducing the cost of domestic and
cross-border funds transfers and payments, including through the continued
modernization of public payment systems. We must take strong steps to
reduce the risks that digital assets could pose to consumers, investors,
and business protections; financial stability and financial system
integrity; combating and preventing crime and illicit finance; national
security; the ability to exercise human rights; financial inclusion and
equity; and climate change and pollution.

Sec. 2. Objectives. The principal policy objectives of the United States
with respect to digital assets are as follows:

(a) We must protect consumers, investors, and businesses in the United
States. The unique and varied features of digital assets can pose
significant financial risks to consumers, investors, and businesses if
appropriate protections are not in place. In the absence of sufficient
oversight and standards, firms providing digital asset services may provide
inadequate protections for sensitive financial data, custodial and other
arrangements relating to customer assets and funds, or disclosures of risks
associated with investment. Cybersecurity and market failures at major
digital asset exchanges and trading platforms have resulted in billions of
dollars in losses. The United States should ensure that safeguards are in
place and promote the responsible development of digital assets to protect
consumers, investors, and businesses; maintain privacy; and shield against
arbitrary or unlawful surveillance, which can contribute to human rights
abuses.

(b) We must protect United States and global financial stability and
mitigate systemic risk. Some digital asset trading platforms and service
providers have grown rapidly in size and complexity and may not be subject
to or in compliance with appropriate regulations or supervision. Digital
asset issuers, exchanges and trading platforms, and intermediaries whose
activities may increase risks to financial stability, should, as
appropriate, be subject to and in compliance with regulatory and
supervisory standards that govern traditional market infrastructures and
financial firms, in line with the general principle of "same business, same
risks, same rules." The new and unique uses and functions that digital
assets can facilitate may create additional economic and financial risks
requiring an evolution to a regulatory approach that adequately addresses
those risks.

(c) We must mitigate the illicit finance and national security risks posed
by misuse of digital assets. Digital assets may pose significant illicit
finance risks, including money laundering, cybercrime and ransomware,
narcotics and human trafficking, and terrorism and proliferation financing.
Digital assets may also be used as a tool to circumvent United States and
foreign financial sanctions regimes and other tools and authorities.
Further, while the United States has been a leader in setting international
standards for the regulation and supervision of digital assets for
anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT),
poor or nonexistent implementation of those standards in some jurisdictions
abroad can present significant illicit financing risks for the United
States and global financial systems. Illicit actors, including the
perpetrators of ransomware incidents and other cybercrime, often launder
and cash out of their illicit proceeds using digital asset service
providers in jurisdictions that have not yet effectively implemented the
international standards set by the inter-governmental Financial Action Task
Force (FATF). The continued availability of service providers in
jurisdictions where international AML/CFT standards are not effectively
implemented enables financial activity without illicit finance controls.
Growth in decentralized financial ecosystems, peer-to-peer payment
activity, and obscured blockchain ledgers without controls to mitigate
illicit finance could also present additional market and national security
risks in the future. The United States must ensure appropriate controls and
accountability for current and future digital assets systems to promote
high standards for transparency, privacy, and security—including through
regulatory, governance, and technological measures—that counter illicit
activities and preserve or enhance the efficacy of our national security
tools. When digital assets are abused or used in illicit ways, or undermine
national security, it is in the national interest to take actions to
mitigate these illicit finance and national security risks through
regulation, oversight, law enforcement action, or use of other United
States Government authorities.

(d) We must reinforce United States leadership in the global financial
system and in technological and economic competitiveness, including through
the responsible development of payment innovations and digital assets. The
United States has an interest in ensuring that it remains at the forefront
of responsible development and design of digital assets and the technology
that underpins new forms of payments and capital flows in the international
financial system, particularly in setting standards that promote:
democratic values; the rule of law; privacy; the protection of consumers,
investors, and businesses; and interoperability with digital platforms,
legacy architecture, and international payment systems. The United States
derives significant economic and national security benefits from the
central role that the United States dollar and United States financial
institutions and markets play in the global financial system. Continued
United States leadership in the global financial system will sustain United
States financial power and promote United States economic interests.

(e) We must promote access to safe and affordable financial services. Many
Americans are underbanked and the costs of cross-border money transfers and
payments are high. The United States has a strong interest in promoting
responsible innovation that expands equitable access to financial services,
particularly for those Americans underserved by the traditional banking
system, including by making investments and domestic and cross-border funds
transfers and payments cheaper, faster, and safer, and by promoting greater
and more cost-efficient access to financial products and services. The
United States also has an interest in ensuring that the benefits of
financial innovation are enjoyed equitably by all Americans and that any
disparate impacts of financial innovation are mitigated.

(f) We must support technological advances that promote responsible
development and use of digital assets. The technological architecture of
different digital assets has substantial implications for privacy, national
security, the operational security and resilience of financial systems,
climate change, the ability to exercise human rights, and other national
goals. The United States has an interest in ensuring that digital asset
technologies and the digital payments ecosystem are developed, designed,
and implemented in a responsible manner that includes privacy and security
in their architecture, integrates features and controls that defend against
illicit exploitation, and reduces negative climate impacts and
environmental pollution, as may result from some cryptocurrency mining.

Sec. 3. Coordination. The Assistant to the President for National Security
Affairs (APNSA) and the Assistant to the President for Economic Policy
(APEP) shall coordinate, through the interagency process described in
National Security Memorandum 2 of February 4, 2021 (Renewing the National
Security Council System), the executive branch actions necessary to
implement this order. The interagency process shall include, as
appropriate: the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Secretary of Defense, the Attorney General, the Secretary of Commerce, the
Secretary of Labor, the Secretary of Energy, the Secretary of Homeland
Security, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget, the Director of National
Intelligence, the Director of the Domestic Policy Council, the Chair of the
Council of Economic Advisers, the Director of the Office of Science and
Technology Policy, the Administrator of the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, the Director of the National Science Foundation, and
the Administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development. Representatives of other executive departments and agencies
(agencies) and other senior officials may be invited to attend interagency
meetings as appropriate, including, with due respect for their regulatory
independence, representatives of the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and
other Federal regulatory agencies.

Sec. 4. Policy and Actions Related to United States Central Bank Digital
Currencies. (a) The policy of my Administration on a United States CBDC is
as follows:

(i) Sovereign money is at the core of a well-functioning financial system,
macroeconomic stabilization policies, and economic growth. My
Administration places the highest urgency on research and development
efforts into the potential design and deployment options of a United States
CBDC. These efforts should include assessments of possible benefits and
risks for consumers, investors, and businesses; financial stability and
systemic risk; payment systems; national security; the ability to exercise
human rights; financial inclusion and equity; and the actions required to
launch a United States CBDC if doing so is deemed to be in the national
interest.

(ii) My Administration sees merit in showcasing United States leadership
and participation in international fora related to CBDCs and in multi
country conversations and pilot projects involving CBDCs. Any future dollar
payment system should be designed in a way that is consistent with United
States priorities (as outlined in section 4(a)(i) of this order) and
democratic values, including privacy protections, and that ensures the
global financial system has appropriate transparency, connectivity, and
platform and architecture interoperability or transferability, as
appropriate.

(iii) A United States CBDC may have the potential to support efficient and
low-cost transactions, particularly for cross border funds transfers and
payments, and to foster greater access to the financial system, with fewer
of the risks posed by private sector-administered digital assets. A United
States CBDC that is interoperable with CBDCs issued by other monetary
authorities could facilitate faster and lower-cost cross-border payments
and potentially boost economic growth, support the continued centrality of
the United States within the international financial system, and help to
protect the unique role that the dollar plays in global finance. There are
also, however, potential risks and downsides to consider. We should
prioritize timely assessments of potential benefits and risks under various
designs to ensure that the United States remains a leader in the
international financial system.

(b) Within 180 days of the date of this order, the Secretary of the
Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, the Attorney
General, the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of Homeland Security, the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget, the Director of National
Intelligence, and the heads of other relevant agencies, shall submit to the
President a report on the future of money and payment systems, including
the conditions that drive broad adoption of digital assets; the extent to
which technological innovation may influence these outcomes; and the
implications for the United States financial system, the modernization of
and changes to payment systems, economic growth, financial inclusion, and
national security. This report shall be coordinated through the interagency
process described in section 3 of this order. Based on the potential United
States CBDC design options, this report shall include an analysis of:

(i) the potential implications of a United States CBDC, based on the
possible design choices, for national interests, including implications for
economic growth and stability;

(ii) the potential implications a United States CBDC might have on
financial inclusion;

(iii) the potential relationship between a CBDC and private
sector-administered digital assets;

(iv) the future of sovereign and privately produced money globally and
implications for our financial system and democracy;

(v) the extent to which foreign CBDCs could displace existing currencies
and alter the payment system in ways that could undermine United States
financial centrality;

(vi) the potential implications for national security and financial crime,
including an analysis of illicit financing risks, sanctions risks, other
law enforcement and national security interests, and implications for human
rights; and

(vii) an assessment of the effects that the growth of foreign CBDCs may
have on United States interests generally.

(c) The Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
(Chairman of the Federal Reserve) is encouraged to continue to research and
report on the extent to which CBDCs could improve the efficiency and reduce
the costs of existing and future payments systems, to continue to assess
the optimal form of a United States CBDC, and to develop a strategic plan
for Federal Reserve and broader United States Government action, as
appropriate, that evaluates the necessary steps and requirements for the
potential implementation and launch of a United States CBDC. The Chairman
of the Federal Reserve is also encouraged to evaluate the extent to which a
United States CBDC, based on the potential design options, could enhance or
impede the ability of monetary policy to function effectively as a critical
macroeconomic stabilization tool.

(d) The Attorney General, in consultation with the Secretary of the
Treasury and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve, shall:

(i) within 180 days of the date of this order, provide to the President
through the APNSA and APEP an assessment of whether legislative changes
would be necessary to issue a United States CBDC, should it be deemed
appropriate and in the national interest; and

(ii) within 210 days of the date of this order, provide to the President
through the APNSA and the APEP a corresponding legislative proposal, based
on consideration of the report submitted by the Secretary of the Treasury
under section 4(b) of this order and any materials developed by the
Chairman of the Federal Reserve consistent with section 4(c) of this order.

Sec. 5. Measures to Protect Consumers, Investors, and Businesses. (a) The
increased use of digital assets and digital asset exchanges and trading
platforms may increase the risks of crimes such as fraud and theft, other
statutory and regulatory violations, privacy and data breaches, unfair and
abusive acts or practices, and other cyber incidents faced by consumers,
investors, and businesses. The rise in use of digital assets, and
differences across communities, may also present disparate financial risk
to less informed market participants or exacerbate inequities. It is
critical to ensure that digital assets do not pose undue risks to
consumers, investors, or businesses, and to put in place protections as a
part of efforts to expand access to safe and affordable financial services.

(b) Consistent with the goals stated in section 5(a) of this order:

(i) Within 180 days of the date of this order, the Secretary of the
Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of Labor and the heads of
other relevant agencies, including, as appropriate, the heads of
independent regulatory agencies such as the FTC, the SEC, the CFTC, Federal
banking agencies, and the CFPB, shall submit to the President a report, or
section of the report required by section 4 of this order, on the
implications of developments and adoption of digital assets and changes in
financial market and payment system infrastructures for United States
consumers, investors, businesses, and for equitable economic growth. One
section of the report shall address the conditions that would drive mass
adoption of different types of digital assets and the risks and
opportunities such growth might present to United States consumers,
investors, and businesses, including a focus on how technological
innovation may impact these efforts and with an eye toward those most
vulnerable to disparate impacts. The report shall also include policy
recommendations, including potential regulatory and legislative actions, as
appropriate, to protect United States consumers, investors, and businesses,
and support expanding access to safe and affordable financial services. The
report shall be coordinated through the interagency process described in
section 3 of this order.

(ii) Within 180 days of the date of this order, the Director of the Office
of Science and Technology Policy and the Chief Technology Officer of the
United States, in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Chairman of the Federal Reserve, and the heads of other relevant agencies,
shall submit to the President a technical evaluation of the technological
infrastructure, capacity, and expertise that would be necessary at relevant
agencies to facilitate and support the introduction of a CBDC system should
one be proposed. The evaluation should specifically address the technical
risks of the various designs, including with respect to emerging and future
technological developments, such as quantum computing. The evaluation
should also include any reflections or recommendations on how the inclusion
of digital assets in Federal processes may affect the work of the United
States Government and the provision of Government services, including risks
and benefits to cybersecurity, customer experience, and social safety net
programs. The evaluation shall be coordinated through the interagency
process described in section 3 of this order.

(iii) Within 180 days of the date of this order, the Attorney General, in
consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of
Homeland Security, shall submit to the President a report on the role of
law enforcement agencies in detecting, investigating, and prosecuting
criminal activity related to digital assets. The report shall include any
recommendations on regulatory or legislative actions, as appropriate.

(iv) The Attorney General, the Chair of the FTC, and the Director of the
CFPB are each encouraged to consider what, if any, effects the growth of
digital assets could have on competition policy.

(v) The Chair of the FTC and the Director of the CFPB are each encouraged
to consider the extent to which privacy or consumer protection measures
within their respective jurisdictions may be used to protect users of
digital assets and whether additional measures may be needed.

(vi) The Chair of the SEC, the Chairman of the CFTC, the Chairman of the
Federal Reserve, the Chairperson of the Board of Directors of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Comptroller of the Currency are each
encouraged to consider the extent to which investor and market protection
measures within their respective jurisdictions may be used to address the
risks of digital assets and whether additional measures may be needed.

(vii) Within 180 days of the date of this order, the Director of the Office
of Science and Technology Policy, in consultation with the Secretary of the
Treasury, the Secretary of Energy, the Administrator of the Environmental
Protection Agency, the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, the
Assistant to the President and National Climate Advisor, and the heads of
other relevant agencies, shall submit a report to the President on the
connections between distributed ledger technology and short-, medium-, and
long-term economic and energy transitions; the potential for these
technologies to impede or advance efforts to tackle climate change at home
and abroad; and the impacts these technologies have on the environment.
This report shall be coordinated through the interagency process described
in section 3 of this order. The report should also address the effect of
cryptocurrencies' consensus mechanisms on energy usage, including research
into potential mitigating measures and alternative mechanisms of consensus
and the design tradeoffs those may entail. The report should specifically
address:

(A) potential uses of blockchain that could support monitoring or
mitigating technologies to climate impacts, such as exchanging of
liabilities for greenhouse gas emissions, water, and other natural or
environmental assets; and

(B) implications for energy policy, including as it relates to grid
management and reliability, energy efficiency incentives and standards, and
sources of energy supply.

(viii) Within 1 year of submission of the report described in section
5(b)(vii) of this order, the Director of the Office of Science and
Technology Policy, in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury, the
Secretary of Energy, the Administrator of the Environmental Protection
Agency, the Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, and the heads of
other relevant agencies, shall update the report described in section
5(b)(vii) of this order, including to address any knowledge gaps identified
in such report.

Sec. 6. Actions to Promote Financial Stability, Mitigate Systemic Risk, and
Strengthen Market Integrity. (a) Financial regulators—including the SEC,
the CFTC, and the CFPB and Federal banking agencies—play critical roles in
establishing and overseeing protections across the financial system that
safeguard its integrity and promote its stability. Since 2017, the
Secretary of the Treasury has convened the Financial Stability Oversight
Council (FSOC) to assess the financial stability risks and regulatory gaps
posed by the ongoing adoption of digital assets. The United States must
assess and take steps to address risks that digital assets pose to
financial stability and financial market integrity.

(b) Within 210 days of the date of this order, the Secretary of the
Treasury should convene the FSOC and produce a report outlining the
specific financial stability risks and regulatory gaps posed by various
types of digital assets and providing recommendations to address such
risks. As the Secretary of the Treasury and the FSOC deem appropriate, the
report should consider the particular features of various types of digital
assets and include recommendations that address the identified financial
stability risks posed by these digital assets, including any proposals for
additional or adjusted regulation and supervision as well as for new
legislation. The report should take account of the prior analyses and
assessments of the FSOC, agencies, and the President's Working Group on
Financial Markets, including the ongoing work of the Federal banking
agencies, as appropriate.

Sec. 7. Actions to Limit Illicit Finance and Associated National Security
Risks. (a) Digital assets have facilitated sophisticated cybercrime related
financial networks and activity, including through ransomware activity. The
growing use of digital assets in financial activity heightens risks of
crimes such as money laundering, terrorist and proliferation financing,
fraud and theft schemes, and corruption. These illicit activities highlight
the need for ongoing scrutiny of the use of digital assets, the extent to
which technological innovation may impact such activities, and exploration
of opportunities to mitigate these risks through regulation, supervision,
public private engagement, oversight, and law enforcement.

(b) Within 90 days of submission to the Congress of the National Strategy
for Combating Terrorist and Other Illicit Financing, the Secretary of the
Treasury, the Secretary of State, the Attorney General, the Secretary of
Commerce, the Secretary of Homeland Security, the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget, the Director of National Intelligence, and the heads
of other relevant agencies may each submit to the President supplemental
annexes, which may be classified or unclassified, to the Strategy offering
additional views on illicit finance risks posed by digital assets,
including cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, CBDCs, and trends in the use of
digital assets by illicit actors.

(c) Within 120 days of submission to the Congress of the National Strategy
for Combating Terrorist and Other Illicit Financing, the Secretary of the
Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, the Attorney
General, the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of Homeland Security, the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget, the Director of National
Intelligence, and the heads of other relevant agencies shall develop a
coordinated action plan based on the Strategy's conclusions for mitigating
the digital asset-related illicit finance and national security risks
addressed in the updated strategy. This action plan shall be coordinated
through the interagency process described in section 3 of this order. The
action plan shall address the role of law enforcement and measures to
increase financial services providers' compliance with AML/CFT obligations
related to digital asset activities.

(d) Within 120 days following completion of all of the following
reports—the National Money Laundering Risk Assessment; the National
Terrorist Financing Risk Assessment; the National Proliferation Financing
Risk Assessment; and the updated National Strategy for Combating Terrorist
and Other Illicit Financing—the Secretary of the Treasury shall notify the
relevant agencies through the interagency process described in section 3 of
this order on any pending, proposed, or prospective rulemakings to address
digital asset illicit finance risks. The Secretary of the Treasury shall
consult with and consider the perspectives of relevant agencies in
evaluating opportunities to mitigate such risks through regulation.

Sec. 8. Policy and Actions Related to Fostering International Cooperation
and United States Competitiveness. (a) The policy of my Administration on
fostering international cooperation and United States competitiveness with
respect to digital assets and financial innovation is as follows:

(i) Technology-driven financial innovation is frequently cross-border and
therefore requires international cooperation among public authorities. This
cooperation is critical to maintaining high regulatory standards and a
level playing field. Uneven regulation, supervision, and compliance across
jurisdictions creates opportunities for arbitrage and raises risks to
financial stability and the protection of consumers, investors, businesses,
and markets. Inadequate AML/CFT regulation, supervision, and enforcement by
other countries challenges the ability of the United States to investigate
illicit digital asset transaction flows that frequently jump overseas, as
is often the case in ransomware payments and other cybercrime-related money
laundering. There must also be cooperation to reduce inefficiencies in
international funds transfer and payment systems.

(ii) The United States Government has been active in international fora and
through bilateral partnerships on many of these issues and has a robust
agenda to continue this work in the coming years. While the United States
held the position of President of the FATF, the United States led the group
in developing and adopting the first international standards on digital
assets. The United States must continue to work with international partners
on standards for the development and appropriate interoperability of
digital payment architectures and CBDCs to reduce payment inefficiencies
and ensure that any new funds transfer and payment systems are consistent
with United States values and legal requirements.

(iii) While the United States held the position of President of the 2020
G7, the United States established the G7 Digital Payments Experts Group to
discuss CBDCs, stablecoins, and other digital payment issues. The G7 report
outlining a set of policy principles for CBDCs is an important contribution
to establishing guidelines for jurisdictions for the exploration and
potential development of CBDCs. While a CBDC would be issued by a country's
central bank, the supporting infrastructure could involve both public and
private participants. The G7 report highlighted that any CBDC should be
grounded in the G7's long-standing public commitments to transparency, the
rule of law, and sound economic governance, as well as the promotion of
competition and innovation.

(iv) The United States continues to support the G20 roadmap for addressing
challenges and frictions with cross-border funds transfers and payments for
which work is underway, including work on improvements to existing systems
for cross-border funds transfers and payments, the international dimensions
of CBDC designs, and the potential of well-regulated stablecoin
arrangements. The international Financial Stability Board (FSB), together
with standard-setting bodies, is leading work on issues related to
stablecoins, cross border funds transfers and payments, and other
international dimensions of digital assets and payments, while FATF
continues its leadership in setting AML/CFT standards for digital assets.
Such international work should continue to address the full spectrum of
issues and challenges raised by digital assets, including financial
stability, consumer, investor, and business risks, and money laundering,
terrorist financing, proliferation financing, sanctions evasion, and other
illicit activities.

(v) My Administration will elevate the importance of these topics and
expand engagement with our critical international partners, including
through fora such as the G7, G20, FATF, and FSB. My Administration will
support the ongoing international work and, where appropriate, push for
additional work to drive development and implementation of holistic
standards, cooperation and coordination, and information sharing. With
respect to digital assets, my Administration will seek to ensure that our
core democratic values are respected; consumers, investors, and businesses
are protected; appropriate global financial system connectivity and
platform and architecture interoperability are preserved; and the safety
and soundness of the global financial system and international monetary
system are maintained.

(b) In furtherance of the policy stated in section 8(a) of this order:

(i) Within 120 days of the date of this order, the Secretary of the
Treasury, in consultation with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of
Commerce, the Administrator of the United States Agency for International
Development, and the heads of other relevant agencies, shall establish a
framework for interagency international engagement with foreign
counterparts and in international fora to, as appropriate, adapt, update,
and enhance adoption of global principles and standards for how digital
assets are used and transacted, and to promote development of digital asset
and CBDC technologies consistent with our values and legal requirements.
This framework shall be coordinated through the interagency process
described in section 3 of this order. This framework shall include specific
and prioritized lines of effort and coordinated messaging; interagency
engagement and activities with foreign partners, such as foreign assistance
and capacity-building efforts and coordination of global compliance; and
whole of government efforts to promote international principles, standards,
and best practices. This framework should reflect ongoing leadership by the
Secretary of the Treasury and financial regulators in relevant
international financial standards bodies, and should elevate United States
engagement on digital assets issues in technical standards bodies and other
international fora to promote development of digital asset and CBDC
technologies consistent with our values.

(ii) Within 1 year of the date of the establishment of the framework
required by section 8(b)(i) of this order, the Secretary of the Treasury,
in consultation with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Commerce, the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget, the Administrator of the
United States Agency for International Development, and the heads of other
relevant agencies as appropriate, shall submit a report to the President on
priority actions taken under the framework and its effectiveness. This
report shall be coordinated through the interagency process described in
section 3 of this order.

(iii) Within 180 days of the date of this order, the Secretary of Commerce,
in consultation with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Treasury,
and the heads of other relevant agencies, shall establish a framework for
enhancing United States economic competitiveness in, and leveraging of,
digital asset technologies. This framework shall be coordinated through the
interagency process described in section 3 of this order.

(iv) Within 90 days of the date of this order, the Attorney General, in
consultation with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the Treasury,
and the Secretary of Homeland Security, shall submit a report to the
President on how to strengthen international law enforcement cooperation
for detecting, investigating, and prosecuting criminal activity related to
digital assets.

Sec. 9. Definitions. For the purposes of this order:

(a) The term "blockchain" refers to distributed ledger technologies where
data is shared across a network that creates a digital ledger of verified
transactions or information among network participants and the data are
typically linked using cryptography to maintain the integrity of the ledger
and execute other functions, including transfer of ownership or value.

(b) The term "central bank digital currency" or "CBDC" refers to a form of
digital money or monetary value, denominated in the national unit of
account, that is a direct liability of the central bank.

(c) The term "cryptocurrencies" refers to a digital asset, which may be a
medium of exchange, for which generation or ownership records are supported
through a distributed ledger technology that relies on cryptography, such
as a blockchain.

(d) The term "digital assets" refers to all CBDCs, regardless of the
technology used, and to other representations of value, financial assets
and instruments, or claims that are used to make payments or investments,
or to transmit or exchange funds or the equivalent thereof, that are issued
or represented in digital form through the use of distributed ledger
technology. For example, digital assets include cryptocurrencies,
stablecoins, and CBDCs. Regardless of the label used, a digital asset may
be, among other things, a security, a commodity, a derivative, or other
financial product. Digital assets may be exchanged across digital asset
trading platforms, including centralized and decentralized finance
platforms, or through peer-to-peer technologies.

(e) The term "stablecoins" refers to a category of cryptocurrencies with
mechanisms that are aimed at maintaining a stable value, such as by pegging
the value of the coin to a specific currency, asset, or pool of assets or
by algorithmically controlling supply in response to changes in demand in
order to stabilize value.

Sec. 10. General Provisions. (a) Nothing in this order shall be construed
to impair or otherwise affect:

(i) the authority granted by law to an executive department or agency, or
the head thereof; or

(ii) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget
relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals.

(b) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and
subject to the availability of appropriations.

(c) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or
benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any
party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities,
its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

Signature of Joe Biden
JOSEPH R. BIDEN, JR.

The White House,

March 9, 2022.

NOTE: This Executive order was published in the Federal Register on March
14.

Joseph R. Biden, Jr., Executive Order 14067—Ensuring Responsible
Development of Digital Assets Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley,
The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/354823

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