Within a few years, retail central bank digital currency
(CBDC) has morphed from an obscure fascination of technophiles and
monetary theorists into a major preoccupation of central bankers. Pilot
projects abound and research on the topic has exploded as private sector
initiatives such as Libra/Diem have focused policymakers’ minds and
taken the status quo option off the table.1
In a new CEPR eBook (Niepelt 2021), academics and policymakers review
what we know about the economic, legal, and political implications of
CBDC, discuss current projects, and look ahead.
Download the eBook Central Bank Digital Currency: Considerations, Projects, Outlook here.
Considerations
The first part of the eBook focuses on specific aspects or
implications of CBDC. Jonathan Chiu and Francisco Rivadeneyra discuss
the consequences of CBDC for bank intermediation. They emphasise that
CBDC might ‘crowd in’ rather than ‘crowd out’ bank intermediation, by
disciplining banks in imperfectly competitive deposit markets; and that
this effect may operate even without interest on CBDC. The authors note
that bank deposits and CBDC would likely constitute imperfect
substitutes and in a world with CBDC, banks might participate in the
provision of CBDC-related services. They discuss channels through which
this might moderate or exacerbate the impact of CBDC on bank profits.
Todd Keister and Cyril Monnet focus on information aspects of digital
payment technologies. They explain how bundling, network effects, and
consumers’ underinvestment in privacy give rise to market power on
digital platforms and undermine risk-sharing. The authors argue that a
CBDC that allows the purchaser’s identity to be hidden could help
improve outcomes by giving consumers control over their data. In
addition, CBDC would help preserve financial stability by providing
useful aggregated payment information for central banks. They conclude
that an appropriately designed CBDC would increase depositor confidence,
rendering runs less likely.
Raphael Auer, Sebastian Doerr, Jon Frost, Leonardo Gambacorta, and
Hyun Song Shin similarly emphasise the centrality of data in the context
of digital payments. They emphasise that monetary authorities need to
foster competition, ensure data privacy, and safeguard the integrity of
the payment system. And they argue that CBDC can help attain these goals
as long as it is integrated in a two-tier architecture, it is
account-based, and it preserves an innovation friendly level playing
field.
Corinne Zellweger-Gutknecht offers a legal perspective. Placing
central bank money in its historic context, she argues that the mandate
of central banks to issue cash implies a right – and a duty – to also
issue CBDC as a digital equivalent and complement to notes and coins if
declining cash circulation made such a complement necessary. She
emphasises that the situation is different for CBDC as a monetary policy
tool, as the introduction of CBDC with functionality beyond the one of
cash would require a change of law.
Dirk Niepelt emphasises political risks. He argues that central banks
can neutralize the effects of CBDC on bank balance sheets, funding
costs, credit, and investment, but that political pressure may lead them
to act differently. He estimates the increase in funding costs that
banks might suffer in a (for them) worst-case scenario to be on the
order of half a percent of GDP, and he cautions that CBDC might lead to
further politicisation of banking and central banking. He also discusses
other political risks in connection with the introduction of ‘Reserves
for All’.
Linda Schilling, Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, and Harald Uhlig
consider possible implications of CBDC for price stability. They argue
that central banks can be subject to ‘spending runs’ where fear of
inflation motivates consumers to spend (central bank) money, rendering
the fear self-fulfilling. They emphasise that this run risk creates a
trilemma if the central bank also engages in maturity transformation:
while the threat of central bank induced inflation can deter runs, the
goals of price stability, absence of spending runs, and maturity
transformation cannot be reconciled. The authors also discuss time
inconsistency problems and warn of dangers for central bank
independence.
Antonio Fatás questions the transformative role of CBDC. He
identifies two types of CBDC benefits: one from publicly providing a
robust pillar of the monetary system, and the other from supplying an
accessible, efficient, and resilient alternative to private digital
money. He argues that account based CBDC could provide the monetary
anchor, realising the first benefit, while inclusiveness, efficiency,
and resiliency goals would be hard to reconcile due to conflicting
implications for payment infrastructures or public-private-partnerships.
He concludes that “CBDC is in no way a substitute for the needed
reforms to the architecture of payments”.
Similarly, Stephen Cecchetti and Kermit Schoenholtz call for the
policy objectives to be clarified. While acknowledging various potential
benefits of CBDC, they caution that these benefits come with risks,
especially when government institutions are weak. The authors emphasise
that it is not sufficient for CBDC to generate positive net gains; after
all, alternatives to CBDC may realsze the same benefits at lower cost.
Accordingly, they conclude that such alternatives need to be assessed
more carefully.
Markus Brunnermeier and Jonathan Payne focus on the bundling of money
creation and financial services. They argue that CBDC could impair the
synergies and valuable incentive effects of bundling deposit (money)
creation and bank lending in today’s financial system. And they explain
how CBDC as legal tender could undermine the commitment benefits of
bundling FinTech token creation and smart contracts, at least in some
markets. The authors caution that the implications of CBDC for financial
market structure deserve careful attention.
Tobias Adrian and Tommaso Mancini-Griffoli offer an international
perspective. They anticipate CBDC benefits from greater efficiency and
resiliency of payment systems, financial inclusion, and smoother
cross-border payments. They also anticipate risks due to bank
disintermediation, central bank reputation loss, and ‘dollarisation’.
The authors discuss measures to limit these risks and emphasise the need
for a rules-based international monetary system that avoids a ‘digital
divide’ between countries.
In the final chapter of the first part, Quentin Vandeweyer considers
stablecoins as potential alternatives for CBDC. He notes three policy
positions on stablecoins, which emphasise financial stability risks,
innovation, and complementarities with CBDC; and he compares the
contemporary debate about cash-reserve assets versus
crypto-collateralised or algorithmic stablecoins with the debate about
bank notes two centuries ago. Vandeweyer discusses the role of a
two-tier CBDC in broadening access to central bank liquidity and
concludes that stablecoins are here to stay but that an overhaul of the
regulatory framework may be needed to fully realise their potential.
Projects
The second part of the eBook focuses on projects. Jonathan Chiu and
Francisco Rivadeneyra report on the Canadian case. They explain how the
Bank of Canada’s contingency plan builds on the question of what role
publicly provided money should play, and how this role can be inferred
from the multiple contemporary functions of cash. Against this
background, they systematically assess the opportunities and risks of
CBDC and point to open questions. They conclude that the “decision to
issue a CBDC belongs ultimately to Canadians and their elected
representatives”.
Martin Flodén and Björn Segendorf offer a Swedish perspective. They
argue that the convertibility of privately issued krona into base money
could soon be called into question, due to declining cash use; the
digital payments landscape might lower the threshold for currency
substitution and increase fragility; and the marginalisation of cash
could undermine credibility. They describe the Riksbank’s responses as
well as scenarios for the future, including building a national
financial market infrastructure and giving FinTechs direct access to it.
Like Chiu and Rivadeneyra, Flodén and Segendorf emphasise the need to
involve decision makers outside of the central bank.
Katrin Assenmacher and Ulrich Bindseil report from Frankfurt. They
describe motivations for and possible consequences of CBDC, with regards
to both the payment system and macroeconomic stability. They argue that
the design of a digital euro would entail a trade-off between usability
for end-users on the one hand, and system wide stability on the other.
And they predict that a digital euro would only be introduced if
policymakers were highly confident about their ability to manage
possible risks.
Three chapters focus on the US case. Christopher Waller questions the
usefulness of a CBDC. He argues that cash will not disappear soon; the
payment system works well; financial inclusion does not require CBDC;
private sector initiatives such as stablecoins could suffice to compress
bank markups; and CBDC need not spur innovation, deter the use of
crypto-assets, or help the US preserve dollar supremacy, while it could
generate new types of risk. He concludes that absent a clear market
failure the government should not compete with private sector financial
service providers.
David Andolfatto shares Waller’s scepticism, but he discounts fears
that CBDC might disintermediate banks or promote runs. He cautions that
adoption of CBDC should not be taken for granted and even if adoption
were widespread, efficient cross-border payments would still require
international cooperation. He also emphasises the market power of credit
card companies and banks, but concludes that the most promising way
forward may not be the introduction of CBDC but rather to promote entry,
for instance by granting ‘narrow bank charters’ to new financial
services providers.
Darrell Duffie emphasises bank market power and problems in the US
payment system. He argues that a public–private CBDC pilot would
generate benefits (even if Congress eventually decided against
deployment) in the form of learning by doing, technological spillovers,
competition, and US participation in international discussions. Among
the main challenges of CBDC, he identifies the trade-off between privacy
and enforced legality of payments; the threat of government stifling
innovation; and operational risks, but not disintermediation or runs.
Like Waller and Andolfatto, Duffie rejects international currency
competition as a convincing motive for a digital dollar.
Andréa Maechler and Andreas Wehrli discuss the role of wholesale
rather than retail central bank digital currency. They argue that
securing the safety and integrity of payments in a DLT-based financial
architecture requires a suitable integration of central bank money
rather than stablecoins or other private payment instruments. The
authors report on two approaches currently being tested in Switzerland:
one building on the existing real-time gross settlement system, and the
other using wholesale central bank digital currency.
Raphael Auer, Giulio Cornelli and Jon Frost conclude the second part
of the eBook with an overview of ongoing CBDC projects. They report that
most central banks view CBDC as a complement to – not a substitute for –
cash that they would deploy relying on public–private partnerships
rather than by directly engaging with retail users. The authors also
report that there is less agreement concerning the importance of
improved cross-border payments or the advantages of account-based versus
token-based CBDC models, while most central banks agree in rejecting
architectures based on permissionless DLT.
Outlook
Several contributors to the eBook also offered predictions. Most, but
far from all, expect that a CBDC in a developed economy would resemble
deposits in terms of user experience. But there is disagreement as to
whether digital currencies would be interest-bearing and how strictly
they would protect privacy. Almost everyone expects that private banks
and service providers rather than the central bank would interact with
end-users.
Many authors view CBDCs as potential threats to monetary sovereignty
in emerging economies, depending on international cooperation as well as
on CBDC design choices, for instance with respect to know-your-customer
regulation or holding restrictions for foreigners. There is
disagreement on whether the introduction of CBDCs would undermine the
political support for cash.
Several authors fear that in the absence of CBDC, declining cash
circulation could undermine trust in central bank money. They caution,
however, that such an effect would only arise in the limit, once cash
really disappears, and that price stability remains an equally or more
important determinant of trust.
Conclusion
While consensus on the ‘right’ CBDC choices remains elusive, common
perspectives are beginning to emerge. First, money, banking and payments
are ripe for upheaval, with or without CBDC. Second, the key risk of
CBDC is unlikely to be bank disintermediation – privacy, politics, and
information may be more critical. Third, the use case for CBDC must be
clarified, country by country; it may not exist, because of alternative,
better solutions for the existing problems. And fourth, as the
implications of CBDC go far beyond the remit of central banks,
parliaments and voters should have the final say.