Central banks around the world are weighing the pros and cons of issuing their own digital currency. This column identifies open research questions around the international macro-financial dimension of central bank digital currencies,...
Nearly 90% of central banks worldwide are weighing the pros and cons
of issuing a central bank digital currency (CBDC) (Boar and Wehrling
2021). The ECB launched the investigation phase for a digital euro
project over the summer. No decision has been taken as to whether to
issue a digital euro.
One of the aspects the ECB is investigating is whether it would be
possible to use the digital euro in cross-border contexts, and under
which conditions. Many other central banks are also reflecting on
whether they would allow non-residents to access their own digital
currency – if they decided to introduce one (CPMI et al. 2021).
Decisions about the issuance and design of CBDCs require a careful
assessment of the trade-offs between risks and opportunities (e.g. Agur
et al. 2021, Bindseil and Panetta 2020, Brunnermeier and Niepelt 2019,
Fernández-Villaverde et al.. 2021, Niepelt 2020, Uhlig and Xie 2021).
The international dimension makes that assessment more challenging
still. So, it is already worth thinking about the implications of the
cross-border use of CBDCs.
This is where research can help policy. The literature on the
international aspects of CBDCs is still in its infancy. Two sets of
research questions are particularly relevant for global macro-financial
policy: What is different about CBDCs? And what are their implications
for international central bank cooperation?1
What we know
Research points to three main implications of allowing non-residents unrestricted access to a given CBDC.
First, a CBDC that can be used outside the jurisdiction where it is
issued might increase the risk of digital currency substitution – or
digital ‘dollarisation’ (e.g. Brunnermeier et al. 2021). If a foreign
CBDC were to be widely adopted, this might lead to the domestic currency
losing its function as a medium of exchange, unit of account and store
of value – ultimately impairing the effectiveness of domestic monetary
policy and raising financial stability risks. These risks are
particularly relevant for emerging markets and less developed economies
that have unstable currencies and weak fundamentals. Currency
substitution could also occur in small advanced economies open to trade
and integrated in global value chains (Ikeda 2020). It is hard to gauge
in advance how significant the risks of digital currency substitution
could be, and in which currencies this substitution could occur. In any
case, according to the (unwritten) code of central banking, the
introduction of a CDBC in one jurisdiction must do no harm.2 In particular, it must not put the financial system of other jurisdictions at risk.
Second, issuing a CBDC can magnify the cross-border transmission of
shocks, increase exchange rate volatility and alter capital flow
dynamics. One reason for this is that CBDCs combine characteristics such
as scalability, liquidity and (potentially) renumeration, which make
them appealing relative to financial assets that are traded
internationally. Research finds that introducing a CBDC available to
non-residents ‘super charges’ uncovered interest rate parity – the
standard relation between interest rate differentials across countries
and the exchange rate (Ferrari et al. 2020). That, in turn, leads to a
stronger rebalancing of global portfolios in response to shocks, and to
higher exchange rate volatility. Economies not issuing a CBDC are then
subject to stronger spillovers. And their central banks need to be more
reactive to output and inflation fluctuations, which reduces their
policy autonomy.
Finally, research suggests that issuing a CBDC which can be used by
non-residents might have an impact on the international role of
currencies. The costs of cross-border payments might fall, which may
enhance the role of a currency as a global payment unit. And the
specific features of a CBDC – such as safety, liquidity, efficiency and
scalability – might further bolster its international use. But there is a
flipside to this: broader international demand may cause the exchange
rate to appreciate. This could weigh on the currency’s attractiveness as
an invoicing or settlement unit for exports in other jurisdictions and,
in turn, reduce global interest in the currency. On the whole, model
simulations by ECB staff suggest that issuing a CBDC would support the
international role of a currency, albeit not to a particularly large
extent (ECB 2021a). In other words, economic fundamentals underpinning
international currency use matter more.
What is different about CBDCs?
Existing research often models CBDCs as safe and liquid instruments.
That is convenient as it allows us to draw on standard macro-monetary
models, with some tweaks here and there. But to truly understand the
risks and opportunities of CBDCs, we need to take them more seriously
and acquire a deeper understanding of what makes them different from
other monetary and financial instruments.
Consider a few examples. First, how much of the discussion on the
risks arising from digital dollarisation is new? The determinants
emphasised in existing research often seem all too reminiscent of the
macro literature of the 1990s on dollarisation. It would be good to
understand what is truly unique about CBDCs now as compared with
dollarisation back then. For instance, maybe the determinants are
unchanged but CBDC makes dollarisation more likely by lowering
transaction costs. Or perhaps CBDCs could be bundled with other useful
services, such as privacy services, rewards or conditional payments.
Second, on international spillovers, introducing any other
internationally traded safe and liquid instrument, such as a highly
rated bond, into a macro model would also produce strong spillovers. So,
can we truly apply the same insights to CBDCs? We need to make sure we
do not miss relevant channels and idiosyncrasies.
Third, concerning the international role of currencies, the effects
obtained are likely calibration- or estimation-dependent. Under which
conditions will standard economic fundamentals remain the main drivers
of international currency status? Research so far indicates that
digitalisation does not change anything fundamental. Yet, to what extent
would CBDCs still have the potential to affect the configuration of
global reserve currencies and the stability of the international
monetary system?
International cooperation
Other questions naturally emerge when considering the international
context. One such question relates to global cooperation. Allowing
non-residents to use a CBDC issued in another jurisdiction may give rise
to externalities. How much international cooperation is desirable to
internalise them is open to debate.
So far, the academic literature provides limited guidance. But
international cooperation offers clear benefits: exchanging information
allows us to share our experiences about possible problems and
solutions, and find consensus on important economic, financial and
regulatory issues of common interest. There might be gains from
reflecting on common standards to make CBDC projects interoperable, for
instance to move from cross-border use of CBDCs to cross-currency
payments between CBDCs. Cooperation is not without costs, however. And
the costs increase with the number of central banks involved and with
their diverse objectives, legal frameworks, financial structures,
mandates and preferences, which would likely be reflected in different
CBDC designs.
So the natural question to ask is: How much global cooperation is
optimal? One might be tempted to aim for uniform standards for CBDCs – a
‘one size fits all’ approach. But whether meaningful cooperation is
possible if conditions differ sharply across countries is unclear. Take
privacy – an important design feature of a digital euro that was raised
by members of the public and professionals in the public consultation
the ECB concluded earlier this year (ECB 2021b). A concrete question is:
How could a jurisdiction with stringent requirements on traceability of
payments allow cross-currency transactions with a jurisdiction granting
higher privacy standards? Privacy is unlikely to be equally important
in all regions of the world. And where diverse preferences exist, some
stakeholders might not see much merit in enforcing global standards.
Still another point to consider is the existence of strategic
interactions – where decisions of one player depend on the actions of
the other players – as they can tilt the balance of the benefits and
costs of global cooperation. Many countries are simultaneously
reflecting on CBDCs. But strategic interactions have not been much
studied in the context of CBDCs, and the international dimension even
less so.
What the optimal timing of actions is, for instance, is not well
understood. It is tempting to see the field of CBDCs as a clean slate at
the moment. But this will not last. The countries that have already
introduced their own CBDCs, such as the Bahamas, cannot set global
standards. This will change if major economies launch their own CBDCs.
Can the ‘pioneer’ central banks that have decided – or are deciding – on
the design of CBDC based on their own considerations be expected to
wait for a consensus to emerge on global standards before moving ahead?
The costs and benefits of being the first to issue a digital currency
are not well understood either. Is it better to issue a digital currency
first – and aim to set standards for others, while putting domestic
objectives at risk – than it is to get it right?
This list of open questions is not exhaustive, of course. But by
addressing them, research would not only push the frontier of knowledge,
it would also provide the conceptual backbone and evidence that could
usefully inform future policy decisions on CBDCs....
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