The recent plunge in crypto assets has left investors numbed by losses and surely in doubt. But the future of money is undoubtedly digital. The question is, what will it look like?
In our
latest issue of Finance & Development, some of the world’s leading experts try to answer this complex and politically charged question.
Of course, digital money has been developing for some time already.
New technologies hope to democratize finance and broaden access to
financial products and services. A main goal is to achieve much cheaper,
instantaneous domestic and cross-border payments. The gains could be
especially great for people in developing countries.
Cornell’s Eswar Prasad
takes us on a tour of existing and emerging forms of digital money and
looks at the implications for finance, monetary policy, international
capital flows—even the organization of societies.
Not every form of digital money will prove viable. Bitcoin, now down
nearly 70 percent from its November peak, and other crypto assets fail
as money, says Singapore’s Ravi Menon,
among others. While they are actively traded and heavily speculated on,
prices are divorced from any underlying economic value. Stablecoins
are designed to rein in the volatility, but many have proved to be
anything but stable, Menon adds, and depend on the quality of the
reserve assets backing them.
Still, journalist Michael Casey
argues, decentralized finance and crypto are not only here to stay but
can address real-world problems such as the energy crisis.
Regulation is key. The regulatory fabric is being woven, and a pattern is expected to emerge, explain the IMF’s Aditya Narain and Marina Moretti.
But the longer this takes, they argue, the more national authorities
will get locked into differing regulatory frameworks. They call for
globally coordinated regulation to bring order to markets, help instill
consumer confidence, and provide a safe space for innovation.
Meanwhile, central banks are considering their own digital currencies. Bank for International Settlements chief Agustín Carstens
and his coauthors suggest that central banks should harness the
technological innovations offered by crypto while also providing a
crucial foundation of trust. Privacy and cybersecurity risks can be
managed with responsibly designed central bank digital currencies, adds
the Atlantic Council’s Josh Lipsky.
Elsewhere in the issue, our contributors look at the benefits and drawbacks of decentralized finance, the future of cross-border payments, and how India and countries in Africa are advancing the digital payment frontier.
It’s too early to tell how the digital landscape will evolve. But
with the right policy and regulatory choices, we can imagine a future
with a mix of government and privately backed currencies held safely in
the digital wallets of billions of people.
Thank you, as ever, for reading us.
IMF
© International Monetary Fund
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