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The digital ruble and the digital euro are the same prison with different walls

Federico Rivi by Federico Rivi
July 3, 2026
in Crypto, Feature
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Moscow and Frankfurt speak different languages but are building the same architecture: programmability, transaction surveillance, abolition of monetary privacy.

During 2026, Piero Cipollone, member of the ECB’s Executive Board, presented the European strategy for digital payments at several venues – including appearances in Cyprus (February), at the Accademia dei Lincei (February), in Brussels before the ECON committee (March) and in Riga (April) – describing the digital euro as “a digital form of cash” capable of offering “freedom of choice between cash and digital payments.” The governor of the Bank of Russia stated that the digital ruble would be ready for widespread use by September 2026.

Both systems rest on a centralised ledger controlled by the issuer, both provide for programmability of transactions, both eliminate the separation between a payment instrument and a surveillance instrument. The fact that one comes from Moscow and the other from Frankfurt leaves intact the structure of the enclosures they produce. Put another way: the uniform of the jailer changes, not the bars.

It is worth pausing on the word “programmability,” because it is the one that works in silence. A programmable currency is a currency to which conditions can be attached: it can expire, it can be spendable only in certain shops, it can be frozen if the holder fails to meet certain requirements. The ECB does not explicitly list these functions in Cipollone’s public documents – the tone is one of convenience and innovation – but the technical platform he describes makes them possible by design. A capability that exists, regardless of who governs today, is a capability that whoever governs tomorrow will be able to use. The selective freezing of funds with private stablecoins has already happened systematically; with CBDCs the scope would be wider still.

Cipollone’s public documents describe the digital euro as “a public infrastructure for digital payments” on which private providers will be able to build value-added services. The digital ruble uses different language but replicates the same logic: the central bank as platform, commercial banks as distributors, the end user as a terminal node in a system he does not control and from which he can exit only by abandoning the legal payment circuit. Both models provide for holding limits, absence of remuneration, and funding and de-funding mechanisms managed by intermediaries. These are constraints presented as guarantees of financial stability, but their real function is to keep the central bank at the centre of the system even when technology would make that unnecessary.

Cipollone’s documents list “financial stability” and European “competitiveness” among the pillars of the digital euro. These are legitimate objectives, but the chosen means redefines both in a statist direction: stability becomes control of flows, competitiveness becomes dependence on a public infrastructure that private solutions must adopt to survive. The Pontes and Appia initiatives – two distinct but complementary Eurosystem projects, respectively for wholesale settlement on DLT (Pontes, operational from the third quarter of 2026) and for the next generation of tokenised financial infrastructure (Appia) – extend the same logic to capital markets, standardising the ledgers on which custodians, CSDs and central counterparties operate.

The parallel with the digital ruble is a structural reading that anyone can make by consulting the primary documents of both institutions. The European Parliament’s ECON committee approved the regulatory framework for the digital euro on 23 June 2026, opening the way for negotiations with the Council and Commission to complete the legislative process by the end of 2026; the Bank of Russia has already conducted pilot phases with selected banks since 2023. The timelines diverge; the direction is shared. Both trajectories point toward a system in which the digital sovereign currency is one of the few legally guaranteed means of payment and in which every transaction that uses it leaves a permanent trace in the hands of the issuer.

The political difference between Russia and the European Union is beside the point: a prison with marble-clad walls is still a prison. The pertinent question concerns what the system becomes when those who govern it change – or when those who govern it decide to use every available function. Monetary privacy, once removed from the base architecture, cannot be recovered by a subsequent directive.

It is therefore worth asking: if the technical structure is the same and if institutional guarantees are by definition revocable, on what exactly does the difference between a “democratic” CBDC and an authoritarian one rest – an act of faith?

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