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  • Digital euro ‘only defence’ against deepening US control of money, economists warn

    Digital euro ‘only defence’ against deepening US control of money, economists warn

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    More than 60 economists have implored EU parliamentarians to back the digital euro, warning the Eurozone would “lose control” of its own money and become more dependent on US companies were the project to fail.

    “A strong public digital euro is not a nice-to-have, it is an essential safeguard of European sovereignty, stability, and resilience,” the economists, including French academic Thomas Piketty, argue in an open letter to MEPs ahead of a European parliament hearing on the subject next week.

    The European Council has supported the European Central Bank’s plan to launch an electronic equivalent to cash by 2029. But it is unclear if the proposal will receive the necessary backing by a majority of the European parliament in a crucial vote later this year.

    The 68 signatories of the open letter, who also include European academics such as France’s Eric Monnet, Germany’s Jan Pieter Krahnen and London-based Daniela Gabor, argue the region is overly dependent on US-based digital payments services, potentially exposing it to “geopolitical leverage, foreign commercial interests, and systemic risks beyond Europe’s control”.

    Thomas Piketty © Ludovic Marin/AFP/Getty Images

    Thirteen euro area countries lack any domestic digital payments option, the economists point out, and rely “entirely on international card schemes” such as Visa, Mastercard and PayPal.

    Without naming US President Donald Trump, the letter refers to “recent developments” that have made such risks “more than a hypothetical”.

    “Europe will lose control over the most fundamental element in our economy: our money. A robust public digital euro is our only defence,” they write in the letter sent to the 720 members of the European parliament on Friday and seen by the FT.

    Europe’s banking industry has been lobbying to scale down the digital euro project. In November, 14 of the region’s biggest lenders, including Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas and ING, warned that the digital euro could undermine private sector efforts in Europe to rival US payment systems.

    Germany’s Banking Industry Committee, the country’s top banking lobby group, has called the ECB’s plans “too complex” and “too expensive”, warning that it offered “little tangible benefit for consumers”.

    Fernando Navarrete, a conservative MEP from Spain appointed by the European parliament to assess the digital euro, has also argued for a significantly scaled-down version of the project.

    The 68 economists urge EU policymakers to “resist the shortsighted financial lobby”.

    The open letter was initiated by Utrecht-based academic think-tank Sustainable Finance Lab and Dutch-based Triodos Bank, a sustainability-focused lender that is supporting the ECB’s plan.

    Triodos chief economist Hans Stegeman, who is among the letter’s signatories, said he thought other banks were concerned that they might lose a fair chunk of deposits from retail clients, who currently represent a cheap and predictable source of funding.

    Under current plans, each individual would be able to hold up to €3,000 in their digital wallet. This money would not be available as a cash deposit for private-sector banks.

    “We want to have a financial system that serves society and not the other way around,” Stegeman said, adding that a public electronic payments system was an important component of that.

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  • Moon phase today explained: What the Moon will look like on January 11, 2025

    Moon phase today explained: What the Moon will look like on January 11, 2025

    We’re now in the last lunar phase before the New Moon, which means we’re almost at the end of this lunar cycle. The lunar cycle lasts about 29.5 days, during which the Moon completes a…

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  • Fueling research in nuclear thermal propulsion | MIT News

    Fueling research in nuclear thermal propulsion | MIT News

    Going to the moon was one thing; going to Mars will be quite another. The distance alone is intimidating. While the moon is 238,855 miles away, the distance to Mars is between 33 million and 249 million miles. The…

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  • Nato silence on Donald Trump’s Greenland threats rattles European allies

    Nato silence on Donald Trump’s Greenland threats rattles European allies

    Nato’s silence in response to Donald Trump’s threats to seize Greenland has prompted alarm among European capitals fearful that the alliance is failing to defend the rights of Denmark.

    It has not issued a public statement asserting Denmark and…

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  • Mary Don’t You Weep — spiritual that became a cry for freedom

    Mary Don’t You Weep — spiritual that became a cry for freedom

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    “Mary Don’t You Weep” is an African-American spiritual that began its life among enslaved peoples in the US. With…

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  • Today’s Hurdle hints and answers for January 11, 2026

    Today’s Hurdle hints and answers for January 11, 2026

    If you like playing daily word games like Wordle, then Hurdle is a great game to add to your routine.

    There are five rounds to the game. The first round sees you trying to guess the…

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  • Last Kurdish forces leave Aleppo after ceasefire deal reached

    Last Kurdish forces leave Aleppo after ceasefire deal reached

    The final Kurdish fighters have withdrawn from the Syrian city of Aleppo, after the announcement of a ceasefire deal in the early hours of Sunday morning.

    Mazloum Abdi, leader of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), said an agreement…

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  • Amidst uncertainty, a helpline in Pakistan becomes a lifeline for Afghans – UN News

    1. Amidst uncertainty, a helpline in Pakistan becomes a lifeline for Afghans  UN News
    2. Amnesty seeks end to Afghans’ refoulement  Dawn
    3. Over 1,800 Afghan Migrants Deported from Pakistan and Iran in One Day  KabulNow
    4. Nearly 400 Families Returned to…

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  • Statins May Help More People With Type 2 Diabetes Than Doctors Once Thought – SciTechDaily

    1. Statins May Help More People With Type 2 Diabetes Than Doctors Once Thought  SciTechDaily
    2. Statins in T2D Reduce Mortality, Major CVD Across Spectrum of Cardiovascular Risk  Pharmacy Times
    3. Statins Show Benefit in T2D Even With Low Baseline CVD…

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