By Liz Stanislawski
The World Council of Credit Unions (WOCCU) has released a white paper calling on credit unions worldwide to prepare for the rapid emergence of stablecoins, warning that digital money is transforming the financial ecosystem and could fundamentally reshape the way cooperative financial institutions serve their members.
Titled How Digital Money Is Impacting Credit Unions, Part 1: Focus on Stablecoins, the report is the first in a three-part series examining the impact of new forms of digital money on the global cooperative finance sector. According to WOCCU, stablecoins have evolved beyond a niche fintech innovation into a significant component of the future financial infrastructure, with banks, payment companies, technology firms and retailers increasingly integrating them into their payment systems.
The report argues that stablecoins pose both opportunities and challenges for credit unions because they directly affect two of their core functions, safeguarding members’ savings and facilitating payments. It cautions that if members increasingly use external digital wallets and payment platforms, credit unions could retain customer accounts while losing their primary financial relationship with members.
WOCCU Vice President of International Advocacy Paul Andrews said the key issue is not whether every credit union should issue a stablecoin, but whether cooperative financial institutions have the legal authority, regulatory flexibility and strategic readiness to participate in the next generation of digital financial infrastructure while preserving their cooperative identity.
The white paper identifies three priority areas for credit union leaders. First, it urges institutions to recognise stablecoins as a strategic issue rather than merely a technological development. Second, it calls for balanced and proportionate regulatory frameworks that allow credit unions to participate fairly in digital money ecosystems while ensuring policymakers understand the cooperative business model. Third, it recommends that boards and senior management incorporate digital money into governance, risk management and long-term strategic planning, while focusing on member education, partnerships and system-wide collaboration.
The report also warns that failing to adapt could result in deposit displacement, reduced payment activity, diminished access to member data and exclusion from emerging payment networks. At the same time, it says credit unions can leverage their traditional strengths, including member trust, community presence and cooperative values, to remain relevant in an increasingly digital financial landscape.
WOCCU said the next papers in the series will examine tokenised deposits and central bank digital currencies before proposing a model regulatory framework for digital money. The organisation represents more than 67,000 credit unions in over 100 countries, serving around 412 million members with assets exceeding US$3.8 trillion.
Courtesy: World Council of Credit Unions (WOCCU)





