Op-ed by Mr Agustín Carstens, General Manager of the BIS, and H.M. Queen Máxima of the Netherlands, the United Nations Secretary-General's Special Advocate for Inclusive Finance for Development, published by Project Syndicate,
Central banks around the world are considering whether to issue their
own digital currencies. While financial inclusion is often cited as a
key motivation, this is not automatic. Precisely how can central bank
digital currencies (CBDCs) be designed and implemented to ensure that
"unbanked" people have access to essential financial services?
According to the World Bank, 1.7 billion
adults worldwide are unbanked. With no access to services from the
formal financial sector, they are forced to resort to alternatives,
often at significant cost or risk. Such financial exclusion entrenches
poverty, limits opportunity and prevents people from protecting
themselves against hardship. It stifles hope for a better future.
Financial inclusion starts, but does not end, with the ability to
make and receive payments. People need a fast, secure, and cheap way to
transfer money. To date, central banks have largely met this need by
providing the most inclusive form of money we currently have: cash.
However, using cash exclusively leaves the unbanked outside the formal
financial system and without the data and transaction trail needed to
readily access financial services. This can make it much more difficult
for small businesses to build savings and gain access to credit.
But due to the widespread adoption of digital and mobile
technologies, the payments landscape is changing. Cash transactions are
declining, and there is a shift toward digital activity – a trend
accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic, when online transactions surged.
Given these broad developments, it is imperative that we work to close
the widening digital divide. Central banks and policymakers now have an
opportunity to explore reforms, including the issuance of digital
central bank money for all.
CDBCs could offer an opportunity to
overcome some barriers facing the unbanked. Traditional services have
potentially prohibitive costs and requirements such as transaction fees,
minimum account balances, or formal proof of identification. Additional
obstacles include the low level of trust in digital payments and the
lack of smartphones among some groups.
While CBDCs are not the only way to overcome these barriers, they
could be part of the inclusion toolkit. Central banks are already
coordinating further improvements to retail payments by adopting fast
payment systems, and CBDCs represent a natural extension of this
continuum. Both fast payment systems and CBDCs can spur competing
providers to offer new services, lower costs, and, ultimately, broaden
access. A further benefit of CBDCs is that, by their very nature, they
will incorporate the unique advantages of central-bank money – safety,
finality, liquidity, and integrity.
CBDCs could bypass many of the vested commercial interests that have
cropped up around payment systems and contributed to inefficiencies and
costs for users. They could also lower costs by removing the credit and
liquidity risks inherent in other forms of digital money. A CBDC has the
potential to upgrade and connect payment systems – both domestically
and across borders. It could spur countries with limited financial
infrastructure to leapfrog directly to a CBDC arrangement, creating an
opportunity to connect to an inclusive, safe, and efficient payments
system.
There are also benefits for social policies. For example, governments
could use CBDCs to channel financial support to low-income households,
which would deepen longer-term inclusion and act as another gateway to
other financial services.
To realize these benefits, any CBDC rollout must be accompanied by policy reforms and safeguards to address potential difficulties and risks, such as low levels of financial and digital literacy, and operational challenges, including cybersecurity. Policy reforms also should prevent disintermediation: the danger that
money will be held in large amounts in CBDC wallets, rather than as
deposits in commercial banks, making it unavailable for lending (such as
mortgages) and other productive purposes.
Central banks also should consider designing CBDCs to level the
playing field. Give people control over their transaction data and the
ability to share it with a wider set of financial service providers. Growing concerns about data privacy could be addressed by hardwiring personal data protections into the structure of a CBDC.
Central banks exploring CBDCs will have many design choices to make to balance privacy protection and transparency, and to ensure both financial inclusion and financial integrity. They will need to
consider whether to grant direct access to consumers or to use a purely
intermediated model that offers CBDC digital wallets through banks or nonbank financial service providers. More dialogue, research, and trials will be needed to show how CBDCs can best become engines of financial inclusion.
Central bankers and other public-sector representatives have a duty
to ensure the financial system is inclusive, open, competitive, and
responsive to the needs and interests of all groups. If designed
properly, CBDCs hold great promise to help support a digital financial
system that works for everyone.
BIS
© BIS - Bank for International Settlements
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