"Public crypto networks as financial market infrastructures"

The ECB Payment System Failed. But Crypto Payments Kept Running.

Last week, a 7-hour outage in the ECB’s Target 2 payment system froze trillions of euros in transactions; wages, social security payments, and bank settlements were delayed for hours across Europe, according to Reuters.

The cause? A hardware defect. No malicious attack, no cybercrime, just a single point of failure in the traditional banking infrastructure that left millions stranded and businesses uncertain.

But what if payments had a backup system?

Funny enough, I filmed a video before the outage even happened explaining how crypto payments mean resilience. Couldn’t have been more timely.

Unlike traditional payments, which rely on a web of intermediaries, central banks, and clearinghouses, crypto transactions settle peer-to-peer on a blockchain. No approval needed, no delays, no downtime.

Even ECB President Christine Lagarde recently pointed out that many payment intermediaries are not European, leaving the EU’s financial system exposed to external risks.

For merchants, crypto payments also mean lower fees; while credit card transactions take a 1.5% to 4% cut (sometimes even higher with restaurant tickets), crypto payments are feeless.

When the traditional system fails, having an alternative matters.

Nobody is saying crypto should replace the system overnight. But adding a parallel rail for payments is a no-brainer.

Resilience matters. Optionality matters. And as crypto payments grow, more merchants will realize that they have a stronger, faster, and cheaper alternative.

Watch the video to see why crypto payments make a difference.

Amusingly enough, I've just learnt about a recent paper, co-signed by no other than ECB's "Bitcoin slayer", Ulrich Bindseil, explaining that public blockchain networks represent a novel payment infrastructure displaying interesting properties. I was so surprised, I chose its title as the title of this article.

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