This column argues that central bank digital currency alone will not achieve those goals unless central banks are willing to engage in all the steps of the payment system or complement their digital currency with ... regulatory changes to ensure competition and interoperability of payments.
In response to new
developments in the area of digital money and payments, an increasing
number of central banks are exploring the possibility of creating their
own version of digital money, typically referred to as central bank
digital currency, or CBDC (Auer et al. 2020, Niepelt 2020).
The motivations of
central banks to launch CBDC are diverse but they start with the
principle that we need a public option for payments (Boar et al. 2020).
In some sense this just means maintaining the status quo. Currently,
physical currency, issued by central banks, runs parallel to private
digital payments. But as the role of physical currency is diminishing,
we might need a digital replacement controlled by the central bank. In
the words of the ECB (2020), CBDC is the “natural transition from
currency” and it will “give people more choices about how to pay”.
But what are the
economic arguments that justify the need for a public option running in
parallel to private systems of payments? Fundamentally, the existence of
a public payment option can be seen as central to the trust in the
currency and its role as the unit of account (Söderberg 2019). Today,
€10 in a bank account can be redeemed by withdrawing a €10 note. This
process creates a connection between the value of the bank account
deposit and the unit of account managed by the central bank. In the
absence of physical currency, that link would disappear.1
But beyond trust in
the currency most central banks tend to emphasize operational benefits
of CBDC such as promoting a resilient, inclusive and efficient payment
system (BIS 2020). For example, the ECB sees the value of resilience to
“cushion the impact of extreme events when traditional payment services
may no longer function” (ECB 2020). And the Riksbank specifically brings
up both the importance of promoting competition and the need to provide
access to individuals struggling with digital payments (Söderberg
2019).
In summary, central
banks are looking for improved resilience, financial inclusion and
increasing competition. But these three goals can only be achieved if
CBDC can effectively compete with private versions of digital money.
This requires that CBDC offers a competitive payment technology, and it
might require that the central bank controls many or all of the steps of
the payment system, something that goes beyond the current CBDC designs
being discussed. In order to understand the issue, we first need to
recognise that digital money is a lot more complex than cash. With cash
the issuance of the asset also represents the creation of the (physical)
payment technology. But when it comes to digital money, there is a
separation between the asset (the digital repository of value) and the
payment technology. And digital payment technologies are complex and
composed of many layers controlled by different private actors. An
account at the central bank will always be a digital record of value but
this does not guarantee that it will be accepted for payments
everywhere of that it will be as efficient as alternative forms of
payments. If CBDC is not competitive with private alternatives it will
be challenging to achieve the stated goals.
Design of CBDC: It’s all in the details
When it comes to the design of CBDC there are three main possibilities being considered (Auer and Böhme 2020):
- Direct CBDC.
Accounts are opened directly at the central bank. The central bank
controls the ledger and is involved in the execution of retail payments.
The central bank acts like a regular bank.
- Hybrid or intermediated CBDC.
The accounts also represent a liability on the central bank balance
sheet, but private intermediaries handle retail payments (and possibly
account opening). The difference between the hybrid and intermediated
model is in whether or not the central bank keeps a central ledger of
all transactions.
- Synthetic CBDC.
Accounts are not on the balance sheet of central banks and, for this
reason, many argue that this is not true CBDC. Intermediaries hold the
liability but are required to deposit 100% of the customers’ accounts at
the central bank.2
Central banks
are mostly focusing on the first two options, where CBDC becomes a
liability on their balance sheet. But the success of CBDC depends on the
details on how payments will be executed. In fact, in all cases above,
even in the case of direct CBDC, private sector intermediaries are
likely to be involved in a transaction. Today when making a payment
using a bank account, it is likely that additional intermediaries are
part of the process: a credit card company (e.g. Visa or Mastercard) or
the company managing the infrastructure of payments (e.g. Stripe or
PayPal).
Central banks are
reluctant to become payment providers and, for that reason, current
projects (e.g. in China, Sweden, and the euro area) are all using a
hybrid model. Their reluctance comes from the fact that they do not want
to “provide end user-facing services such as customer identification
and support” and, in addition, “a parallel infrastructure would also run
counter to the aim of issuing a digital euro in order to improve the
cost and environmental footprint of payments” (ECB (020).
Vox
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