This Policy Brief presents the key findings of a survey of central banks about their engagement in central bank digital currency (CBDC) and it discusses these findings in the context of cross-border payments. Nine out of 10 central banks are exploring CBDCs and more than half consider it likely or possible they will issue a CBDC in the foreseeable future.
Work on CBDCs is
increasingly driven by motivations related to cross-border payments
efficiency. Many cross-border payments today are slow, expensive, opaque
and difficult to access. Central banks believe CBDCs are capable of
alleviating some of the underlying pain points, such as the limited
operating hours of current payment systems and the length of current
transaction chains. For CBDCs to improve cross-border payments, however,
central banks must make fundamental decisions on foreign access and how
CBDCs connect across jurisdictions.
Introduction
Central banks have shown an increasing
interest in CBDCs over the past years (Boar and Wehrli (2021)). A CBDC
is a central bank-issued digital form of money. When intended for use by
the general public for storing value and making payments, it is
referred to as a “retail” CBDC. A “wholesale” CBDC targets a different
group of end users – financial institutions (Bank for International
Settlements (2021)).
In addition to safeguarding and
improving financial inclusion, financial stability and domestic payments
efficiency, retail and wholesale CBDCs could play an important role in
addressing long-standing challenges in the cross-border payments market
(CPMI et al (2021)). An ambitious, multi-year G20 programme is under way
to make cross-border payments faster, cheaper, more transparent and
more accessible. One of the building blocks of this G20 programme is
tasked with exploring how to factor an international dimension into CBDC
design.1
As part of this work, the Bank for International Settlements’ Committee
on Payments and Market Infrastructures (CPMI), BIS Innovation Hub
(BISIH), International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank (WB) published
a G20 report in July 2022 that presents different design options that
would allow a CBDC to be used across borders (CPMI et al (2022)).
Leveraging the work of Kosse and Mattei
(2022), this Policy Brief summarises the results of the latest Bank for
International Settlements’ survey among central banks about their
engagement in CBDC work, as well as their motivations and expectations
for issuing one. This survey was conducted in the autumn of 2021, for
the fifth consecutive year.2
It was answered by a record 81 central banks, whose jurisdictions
represent about 75% of the world’s population and nearly 95% of global
economic output. Based on the July 2022 G20 report of the CPMI, BISIH,
IMF and WB, this Policy Brief then discusses how the cross-border
potential of CBDCs could be fully harnessed.
Central banks’ work on CBDCs continues to advance
Over the past years, central banks’ work
on CBDCs moved into more advanced stages. In 2021, the share of central
banks actively engaged in some form of CBDC work grew to 90% (Graph 1,
first panel). Also, an increasing number of central banks are in the
advanced stages of exploring a CBDC. On average, the share of central
banks developing a CBDC or running a pilot almost doubled from 14% to
26%. More than 60% are conducting experiments or proofs-of-concept. The
work on retail CBDCs is at a more advanced stage than the work on
wholesale CBDCs. Almost one fifth of central banks are developing or
testing a retail CBDC, which is twice the share of central banks
building or piloting a wholesale CBDC (second panel).
More than half of central banks consider
it a possibility that they will issue a CBDC in the foreseeable future
(third panel). Overall, the share of central banks that indicated to be
likely or possible to issue in the short or medium term is larger for
retail CBDC (68%) than for wholesale CBDC (54%). Also, as in previous
years, this likelihood is generally higher for emerging market and
developing economies (EMDEs) than for advanced economies (AEs).
The issuance of a CBDC requires a legal
framework that provides central banks with the authority to do so.
Compared with last year, the share of central banks with such a legal
authority increased from 18% to 26%. In addition, about 10% of
jurisdictions are currently changing their laws (fourth panel). Thus,
more than a third of central banks will soon have legal authority to
launch a CBDC.
1Each bar represents the
percentage of respondents that is likely/possible/unlikely to issue a
CBDC either in the short term (1–3 years) or in the medium term (1–6
years). “Likely” combines “very likely” and “somewhat likely”.
“Unlikely” combines “very unlikely” and “somewhat unlikely”. Source:
Kosse and Mattei (2022).
ore at SUERF
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