Monetary transformations through history have been driven by changing technology, changing tastes, economic growth, and the demands to effectively satisfy the functions of money. 
      
    
    
      This column argues that technological 
change in money and finance is inevitable, driven by the financial 
incentives of a market economy, and identifies four key lessons central 
banks could learn from history to enable them to provide digital 
currency to effectively fulfil their public mandates.
      
  
Debate 
swirls in monetary policy circles over whether, how, and when to 
introduce central bank digital currencies (e.g. Allen et al. 2020, Auer 
and Bohme 2020, Auer et al. 2020, Agur et al. 2020; see also the Vox 
debate on “The future of digital money”).
 This debate has a strong resonance with earlier crossroads in monetary 
history when major transformations took place. In today’s crossroad, 
advances in technology – digitalisation – have led to the development of
 new forms of money. These include virtual (crypto) currencies like 
bitcoin, stable coins like libra/diem, and central bank digital 
currencies (CBDC) like the Bahamian sand dollar. Today’s innovations 
have a resonance with earlier major shifts in monetary history, and in a
 new paper (Bordo 2021) I examine the case for CBDC through this lens.
My overview of the 
history of monetary transformations suggests that technological change 
in money is inevitable, driven by the financial incentives of a market 
economy. Government has always had a key role in the provision of 
currency (outside money), which is a public good. It has also regulated 
inside money provided by the commercial banking system. This held for 
fiduciary money and will likely hold for digital money.
Monetary transformations in history
Monetary 
transformations in history have been driven by changing technology, 
changing tastes, economic growth, and the demands to effectively satisfy
 the functions of money. Money (and finance) has evolved with human 
history (Goetzmann 2017). Three historical transformations set the stage
 for the current digital transformation.
- In the 18th and
 19th centuries, new financial technology led to the advent of fiduciary
 money (convertible bank notes), which greatly reduced the resource 
costs of specie (Smith 1776). In addition, the exigencies of rising 
costs of war finance in the early modern era led to the issue by 
governments of inconvertible fiat money. CBDC as a social saving over 
fiat money promises to be the next generation in this progression.
- The early record of
 poorly regulated commercial banks issuing notes, ostensibly convertible
 into specie, has been used to make the case for government regulation 
of commercial banking and for a government monopoly of the note issue 
(Friedman 1960). The record of free banking in the US was one of 
considerable instability (Gorton 1986). The high asymmetric information 
costs of a multiple currency system created an inefficient payments 
system.1,2 The note issue eventually gravitated towards a 
central bank/government monopoly. The present day rise of 
cryptocurrencies and stablecoins suggests that the outcome may also be a
 process of consolidation towards CBDC.
- Central banks, from
 the 17th to 20th centuries, evolved to satisfy several important public
 needs: war finance; an efficient payments system; financial stability; 
price stability; macro stability. Through a slow and painful learning 
process, monetary policy has evolved into the present-day flexible 
inflation targeting based on credibility for low inflation. CBDC could 
follow in this tradition.
The case for CBDC
The basic case for 
CBDC – defined as an asset in electronic form which serves the basic 
functions of paper currency, with universal access and legal tender – 
can be traced back to the classical economists’ argument that currency 
is a public good that would appropriately be provided by the government 
(Friedman and Schwartz 1986). CBDC would satisfy the basic functions of 
money: a unit of account, a medium of exchange, and a store of value 
(Bordo and Levin 2017).
The key factors driving interest today in CBDC include the following:
- CBDC would be 
the 21st century version of Adam Smith’s social saving of fiduciary 
money by reducing the costs of issuing and operating physical currency 
(by between 0.5% and 1.0% of GDP according to IMF  2020) and by reducing 
the monopoly rents earned by the commercial banking system (Barrdear and
 Kumhoff 2016, Andolfatto 2019). 
- Digitalisation has 
greatly reduced the use of cash in several countries (e.g. Sweden and 
Norway). CBDC would provide a payment media which has all the attributes
 of physical cash but is less subject to theft and loss. 
- CBDC would increase financial inclusion for disadvantaged groups that do not have access to bank accounts. 
- CBDC may head off 
the threat to monetary sovereignty from stablecoins issued by global 
digital services companies like Facebook, which would threaten central 
banks’ ability to conduct monetary policy. 
- CBDC would provide a
 secure reliable currency, free from the dangers of fraud, hacking, 
money laundering and financing terrorism.
Implementation of CBDC in the real world
Implementation of 
CBDC raises a number of important questions about its design which have 
been examined closely by central banks. One issue is the choice of 
retail versus wholesale CBDC. Significant improvements in the wholesale 
payments clearing mechanism suggest that the key issue is retail CBDC. 
Here, the public good aspect of currency provides a strong rationale for
 either direct provision or at least close regulation and supervision by
 government. Accounts at the central bank are eminently feasible, but 
the private sector has a comparative advantage in financial innovation. 
Hence, in advanced countries, a two-tiered or public–private arrangement
 may be preferable. Designated institutions could offer CBDC accounts to
 the public or serve as conduits for the central bank (Tobin 1987).3
Second, concern 
among prominent officials (Carstens 2021, Cecchetti 2021) that 
account-based CBDC which is the most secure direct liability of the 
central bank would lead to disintermediation and runs from the 
commercial banking system. Research suggests that disintermediation 
could be offset by central bank balance sheet policy, by restricting 
CBDC holdings, or by tiering interest rates on CBDC and non-CBDC 
accounts (Kiester and Sanchez 2019, Brunnermier and Niepelt 2019, Kumhof
 and Noone 2018, Bindseil 2020). Moreover, central banks have adequate 
lines of defence to deal with runs in the form of supervision and 
regulation, deposit insurance, and lender of last resort.4
VOX
      
      
      
      
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