Some countries may be tempted by a shortcut: adopting cryptoassets as national currencies. Many are indeed secure, easy to access, and cheap to transact. We believe, however, that in most cases risks and costs outweigh potential benefits.
New digital forms of money have the potential to provide cheaper and
faster payments, enhance financial inclusion, improve resilience and
competition among payment providers, and facilitate cross-border
transfers.
But doing so is not straightforward. It requires significant
investment as well as difficult policy choices, such as clarifying the
role of the public and private sectors in providing and regulating
digital forms of money.
Some countries may be tempted by a shortcut: adopting cryptoassets as
national currencies. Many are indeed secure, easy to access, and cheap
to transact. We believe, however, that in most cases risks and costs
outweigh potential benefits.
Cryptoassets are privately issued tokens based on cryptographic
techniques and denominated in their own unit of account. Their value can
be extremely volatile. Bitcoin, for instance, reached a peak of $65,000
in April and crashed to less than half that value two months later.
And yet, Bitcoin lives on. For some, it is an opportunity to transact
anonymously—for good or bad. For others, it is a means to diversify
portfolios and hold a speculative asset that can bring riches but also
significant losses.
Cryptoassets are thus fundamentally different from other kinds of
digital money. Central banks, for instance, are considering issuing
digital currencies—digital money issued in the form of a liability of
the central bank. Private companies are also pushing the frontier, with
money that can be sent over mobile phones, popular in East Africa and
China, and with stablecoins, whose value depends on the safety and
liquidity of backing assets.
Cryptoassets as legal tender?
Bitcoin and its peers have mostly remained on the fringes of finance
and payments, yet some countries are actively considering granting
cryptoassets legal tender status, and even making these a second (or
potentially only) national currency.
If a cryptoasset were granted legal tender status, it would have to
be accepted by creditors in payment of monetary obligations, including
taxes, similar to notes and coins (currency) issued by the central bank.
Countries can even go further by passing laws to encourage the use of
cryptoassets as a national currency, that is, as an official monetary
unit (in which monetary obligations can be expressed), and a mandatory
means of payment for everyday purchases.
Cryptoassets are unlikely to catch on in countries with stable
inflation and exchange rates, and credible institutions. Households and
businesses would have very little incentive to price or save in a
parallel cryptoasset such as Bitcoin, even if it were given legal tender
or currency status. Their value is just too volatile and unrelated to
the real economy.
Even in relatively less stable economies, the use of a globally
recognized reserve currency such as the dollar or euro would likely be
more alluring than adopting a cryptoasset.
A cryptoasset might catch on as a vehicle for unbanked people to make
payments, but not to store value. It would be immediately exchanged
into real currency upon receipt.
Then again, real currency may not always be readily available, nor
easily transferable. Moreover, in some countries, laws forbid or
restrict payments in other forms of money. These could tip the balance
towards widespread use of cryptoassets.
Proceed with caution
The most direct cost of widespread adoption of a cryptoasset such as
Bitcoin is to macroeconomic stability. If goods and services were priced
in both a real currency and a cryptoasset, households and businesses
would spend significant time and resources choosing which money to hold
as opposed to engaging in productive activities. Similarly, government
revenues would be exposed to exchange rate risk if taxes were quoted in
advance in a cryptoasset while expenditures remained mostly in the local
currency, or vice versa.
Also, monetary policy would lose bite. Central banks cannot set
interest rates on a foreign currency. Usually, when a country adopts a
foreign currency as its own, it “imports” the credibility of the foreign
monetary policy and hope to bring its economy–and interest rates–in
line with the foreign business cycle. Neither of these is possible in
the case of widespread cryptoasset adoption.
As a result, domestic prices could become highly unstable. Even if
all prices were quoted in, say, Bitcoin, the prices of imported goods
and services would still fluctuate massively, following the whims of
market valuations.
Financial integrity could also suffer. Without robust anti-money
laundering and combating the financing of terrorism measures,
cryptoassets can be used to launder ill-gotten money, fund terrorism,
and evade taxes. This could pose risks to a country’s financial system,
fiscal balance, and relationships with foreign countries and
correspondent banks.
The Financial Action Task Force has set a standard for how virtual
assets and related service providers should be regulated to limit
financial integrity risks. But enforcement of that standard is not yet
consistent across countries, which can be problematic given the
potential for cross-border activities.
Further legal issues arise. Legal tender status requires that a means
of payment be widely accessible. However, internet access and
technology needed to transfer cryptoassets remains scarce in many
countries, raising issues about fairness and financial inclusion.
Moreover, the official monetary unit must be sufficiently stable in
value to facilitate its use for medium- to long-term monetary
obligations. And changes to a country’s legal tender status and monetary
unit typically require complex and widespread changes to monetary law
to avoid creating a disjointed legal system.
In addition, banks and other financial institutions could be exposed
to the massive fluctuations in cryptoasset prices. It is not clear
whether prudential regulation against exposures to foreign currency or
risky assets in banks could be upheld if Bitcoin, for instance, were
given legal tender status.
Moreover, widespread cryptoasset use would undermine consumer
protection. Households and businesses could lose wealth through large
swings in value, fraud, or cyber-attacks. While the technology
underlying cryptoassets has proven extremely robust, technical glitches
could occur. In the case of Bitcoin, recourse is difficult as there is
no legal issuer.
Finally, mined cryptoassets such as Bitcoin require an enormous
amount of electricity to power the computer networks that verify
transactions. The ecological implications of adopting these cryptoassets
as a national currency could be dire.
Striking a balance
As national currency, cryptoassets—including Bitcoin—come with
substantial risks to macro-financial stability, financial integrity,
consumer protection, and the environment. The advantages of their
underlying technologies, including the potential for cheaper and more
inclusive financial services, should not be overlooked. Governments,
however, need to step up to provide these services, and leverage new
digital forms of money while preserving stability, efficiency, equality,
and environmental sustainability. Attempting to make cryptoassets a
national currency is an inadvisable shortcut.
IMF
© International Monetary Fund
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