Cold hard (digital) cash: the economics of central bank digital currency (2024)

by Toni Ahnert, Katrin Assenmacher, Peter Hoffmann, Agnese Leonello, Cyril Monnet, and Davide Porcellacchia[1]

Central banks around the world are exploring the case for central bank digital currency (CBDC) – essentially a digital version of cash. In this article, we provide an overview of the economics of CBDC (Ahnert et al., 2022a). First, we outline the economic forces that shape the rise of digital money and motivate the current debate. We then look at the implications for monetary policy and financial stability before discussing policy issues and challenges. Finally, we highlight several areas where our understanding of digital money could be improved by further research.

How to pay in a digital world?

You can’t use cash to pay online. This is one of the reasons why physical currency is losing its appeal as an efficient means of payment in the digital age. The proliferation of online shopping and digital payments has been accompanied by a steady decline in cash use over the past one and a half decades (see Figure 1). Speaking broadly, digitalisation of economic activity profoundly affects how people pay for things.

Figure 1

Growth in e-commerce and the declining use of cash

Cold hard (digital) cash: the economics of central bank digital currency (1)Cold hard (digital) cash: the economics of central bank digital currency (2)

Most people don’t see a difference between cash and digital payments, beyond the obvious fact that paying with cash involves exchanging physical money, whereas digital transactions do not. But there is also a subtler difference. Cash is public money – it is a liability of the central bank and thus perfectly safe. By contrast, digital money originates in the private sector, most commonly in the form of bank deposits. Despite being the liability of a private entity, money issued by banks can always be converted to cash at face value thanks to financial regulation and deposit insurance. This is why people consider it to be safe and useful as a means of payment.

The rise of digital platforms as a dominant business model of the information age is challenging the central role of banks in the payment system. Large technology firms and financial start-ups are bundling payments with digital services, such as online marketplaces, messaging apps and financial services (for example lending and insurance). While banks continue to provide the underlying payment rails for these solutions, they are losing access to the customer interface. Further disruption is potentially looming on the horizon, caused by rapidly developing and complex payment innovations. This includes distributed ledger technology, which provides the basis for “stablecoins” (crypto-assets designed to maintain a stable value) that could be used as means of payment.

Why central bank digital currency?

The declining use of cash and the potential for a growing role of new forms of money outside the regulated banking sector have led to calls for the introduction of a digital version of cash, often referred to as central bank digital currency (CBDC). There are at least three key arguments that support these calls.

First, public money plays a special role as the anchor of the monetary system. People are willing to accept payments in private money (credit cards and bank transfers) because they know that it can be exchanged easily for perfectly safe public money (cash). However, if cash is no longer used widely, the promise of perfect convertibility loses bite. In this scenario, a digital version of cash would ensure the continuation of the current monetary system.

Second, the issuance of CBDC helps to preserve the central bank’s control over the currency (Brunnermeier et al., 2019). Thanks to their global reach, digital platforms may become large issuers of private digital money.[2] If, in an extreme scenario, private money crowds out public money as the monetary unit in contracts and transactions (the “unit of account”), the central bank can no longer conduct effective monetary policy or safeguard financial stability by acting as lender of last resort. A CBDC could prevent such a scenario by offering a public version of digital money to meet demand.

Third, a CBDC could help to preserve privacy. Private enterprises typically seek to profit from the personal data they can collect when people make digital payments, which can discourage their use in the first place – an inefficient outcome. A CBDC could be designed to provide users with more control over their data, for example over whether they choose to share personal data with third parties to receive more personalised services. This can foster efficiency and welfare in the digital economy (Ahnert et al., 2022b).

How might central bank digital currency affect monetary policy?

The introduction of a central bank digital currency (CBDC) without any safeguards could lead to a significant shift in a monetary system. It is a potential concern that savers may withdraw funds from banks en masse and deposit them in CBDC with the central bank. This could make it more difficult for banks to provide loans, one of their key economic functions (Keister and Sanches, 2022). But other research has shown that these concerns may only materialise if the banking sector is perfectly competitive. When banks enjoy market power, the introduction of CBDC presents an alternative to deposits. Accordingly, banks are forced to compete more by increasing the interest rates paid on deposit accounts. In turn, this would attract more deposits and enable banks to extend more credit to firms and households (Andolfatto, 2019; Chiu et al, 2022).

CBDC was not proposed with the intention of developing a new monetary policy tool. Nonetheless, it might provide an additional lever for central banks. For example, it could improve the extent to which central bank policy rates are passed on to savers by increasing competition in deposit markets.[3] Similarly, it may enable the central bank to separately target specific frictions in the financial system, and thus stabilise inflation and the overall economy more efficiently (Assenmacher et al., 2022).

Introducing a CBDC could imply changes for central banks’ operations and their balance sheets. In particular, following a substitution of bank deposits for CBDC, central banks may need to channel funds back to the banking sector through lending operations (Brunnermeier and Niepelt, 2019). More broadly, the introduction of CBDC would also affect the way that monetary policy is implemented in practice. For example, volatility in CBDC demand could render interest rate control in a traditional corridor system more challenging, and thus favour a floor system with an ample level of reserves (see Malloy et al., 2022). If non‐banks were to distribute CBDC to the public, they might require direct access to the central bank balance sheet and this could necessitate changes to the counterparty framework.

How might central bank digital currency affect financial stability?

As with monetary policy, the effects of central bank digital currency (CBDC) on financial stability would be channelled through the banking system. If banks experience an increase in funding costs, as discussed above, this may lead to a reduction in profit margins. Consequently, this may encourage banks to take on more risk on the asset side of their balance sheets, for example by extending more risky loans or investing in more speculative securities (Keeley, 1990).

On the liability side, the availability of CBDC alters banks’ exposure to the risk of runs, where large numbers of depositors rush all at once to withdraw their funds in cash. In Ahnert et al. (2022c), two countervailing effects are at work. On the one hand, given its nature as safe and interest-bearing investment, the availability of CBDC increases depositors’ incentives to run, relative to an economy where cash is the only alternative to bank deposits (“Direct effect”, Figure 2). On the other hand, to retain deposits, banks respond to the introduction of CBDC by raising interest rates; this makes deposits more attractive and thus reduces fragility (“Indirect effect”, Figure 2). As a consequence, the overall effect of CBDC on bank fragility varies with the relative strength of these two forces. For low (high) levels of CBDC remuneration, the indirect (direct) effect dominates, so that an increase in remuneration reduces (increases) financial fragility.

Figure 2

The direct and indirect effect of CBDC remuneration on bank fragility

Cold hard (digital) cash: the economics of central bank digital currency (3)

CBDC design features may also play an important role for financial stability – for example, by improving the effectiveness of policies aimed at stabilising the financial system. It is well-known that the timing and the design of policy interventions such as bailouts and liquidity support are crucial. Policymakers can make better decisions if they have better information. Movements in CBDC accounts held by the central bank could provide real-time information about the health of the financial system, which could improve the effectiveness of central bank interventions, and thus overall financial stability (Keister and Monnet, 2022).

What challenges remain for central bank digital currency?

Central bank digital currency (CBDC) may be able to maintain the role of public money as a monetary anchor in the digital age and it could help to set privacy standards in payments. However, broader challenges, particularly in relation to privacy in the digital economy, go well beyond the remit of central banks. Tighter regulation can, and must, address the most pressing concerns related to the financial stability issues surrounding new technologies, such as stablecoins. The recent failure of Terra provides a good illustration of the underlying risks.[4] While the European Union’s Markets in Crypto‐Assets Regulation represents a step in this direction, Gorton and Zhang (2022) go further by proposing a public monopoly on “circulating money”.

Up to now, discussion of the potential risks of introducing a CBDC has largely focused on the scenario of excessive take-up and the potential implications for credit supply and financial stability. In this context, policy makers have proposed safeguards, such as making large CBDC holdings unattractive by way of very low (and possibly negative) interest rates (Bindseil, 2020), or imposing direct limits on the amount that individuals may hold (European Central Bank, 2020).

However, there is also a risk of too little adoption if CBDC turns out not to be a sufficiently attractive product. Ultimately, success requires sufficient use by both merchants and consumers, owing to the two-sided nature of payment markets (see Rochet and Tirole, 2003). While cost considerations are likely to dominate for merchants, the possibility of integrating payments with other digital services, such as data analytics, may become more important over time. Consumers tend to value convenience and universal acceptance most. However, the role of privacy and the implications of safeguards to limit user demand are not yet well understood. Central banks need to design CBDC carefully to strike the right balance between excessively high and low demand.

Conclusions: the state of play on central bank digital currency

The debate on central bank digital currency (CBDC) has gained traction. According to a recent survey by the Bank for International Settlements, almost all respondent central banks are actively investigating the potential for a CBDC (Kosse and Mattei, 2022). In some sense, the introduction of digital cash is a natural evolution, in line with many other aspects of life moving into the digital sphere (Panetta, 2021). However, as discussed above, the underlying economics and the potential implications for the financial system are complex and warrant further study.

References

Ahnert, T., Assenmacher, K., Hoffmann, P., Leonello, A., Monnet, C. and Porcellacchia, D. (2022a), “The economics of central bank digital currency”, Working Paper Series, No 2713, ECB, Frankfurt am Main.

Ahnert, T., Hoffmann, P. and Monnet, C. (2022b), “The digital economy, privacy, and CBDC”, Working Paper Series, No 2662, ECB, Frankfurt am Main.

Ahnert, T., Hoffmann, P., Leonello, A. and Porcellacchia, D. (2022c), “CBDC and Financial Stability” Unpublished Working Paper.

Andolfatto, D. (2021), “Assessing the impact of central bank digital currency on private banks”, The Economic Journal, Volume 131, Issue 634, pp. 525-540.

Assenmacher, K., Bitter, L. and Ristiniemi, A. (2022), “CBDC and business cycle dynamics in a New Monetarist New Keynesian model”, Unpublished Working Paper.

Bindseil, U. (2020), “Tiered CBDC and the financial system”, Working Paper Series, No 2351, ECB, Frankfurt am Main.

Bordo, M. and Levin, A. (2017), “Central bank digital currency and the future of monetary policy”, NBER Working Paper, No 23711.

Brunnermeier, M.K. and Niepelt, D. (2019) “On the equivalence of private and public money”, Journal of Monetary Economics, No 106, pp. 27-41.

Brunnermeier, M. K., James, H. and Landau J.P. (2019), “The digitalization of money”, NBER Working Paper, No 26300.

Chiu, J., Davoodalhosseini, S.M., Hua Jiang, J. and Zhu, Y. (2022), “Bank Market Power and Central Bank Digital Currency: Theory and Quantitative Assessment”. Working Paper Series, Bank of Canada, Ottawa.

Driscoll, J. C, and Judson, R. (2013), “Sticky deposit rates”, Finance and Economics Discussion Series, Divisions of Research & Statistics and Monetary Affairs, Federal Reserve Board, Washington, D.C.

European Central Bank (2020), Report on a digital euro, Frankfurt am Main.

Garratt, R.J. and Van Oordt, M.R. (2021), “Privacy as a public good: a case for electronic cash”, Journal of Political Economy, Volume 129, No 7, pp. 2157–2180.

Gorton, G. and Zhang, J. (2022), “Protecting the sovereign’s money monopoly”, Unpublished Working Paper.

Keeley, M.C. (1990), “Deposit Insurance, Risk, and Market Power in Banking”, American Economic Review, Volume 80, No 5, pp. 1183-1200

Keister, T. and Monnet, C. (2022), “Central Bank Digital Currency: Information and Stability”, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, forthcoming.

Keister, T. and Sanches, D. (2022), “Should Central Banks Issue Digital Currency?”, Review of Economic Studies, forthcoming.

Kosse, A. and Mattei, I. (2022), “Gaining momentum–Results of the 2021 BIS survey on central bank digital currencies”,BIS Papers, No 125, Bank for International Settlements, Basel

Lilley, A., and Rogoff, K. (2020), “The case for implementing effective negative interest rate policies” in: Cochrane, J. and Taylor, J. (eds.) Strategies for Monetary Policy, Chapter 2, Hoover Institution Press, pp. 27-90.

Malloy, M., Martinez, F., Styczynski, M.F. and Thorp, A. (2022), “Retail CBDC and U.S. monetary policy implementation: A stylized balance sheet analysis”, Finance and Economics Discussion Series, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

Neumark, D., and Sharpe, S. A. (1992) “Market structure and the nature of price rigidity: evidence from the market for consumer deposits”, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 107, No 2, pp. 657-680.

Panetta, F. (2021), “Evolution or revolution? The impact of a digital euro on the financial system”, Bruegel online seminar, 10 February.

Rochet, J.C., and Tirole, J. (2003), “Platform competition in two-sided markets”, Journal of the European Economic Association, Volume 1, No 4, pp. 990-1029.

Cold hard (digital) cash: the economics of central bank digital currency (2024)

FAQs

What are the 2 types of central bank digital currency? ›

Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) come in two main forms: retail and wholesale. A retail CBDC is used by the general public, while a wholesale CBDC is used for transactions between banks and other financial institutions.

Does the central bank have a digital currency? ›

A central bank digital currency (CBDC) is a form of digital currency issued by a country's central bank. It is similar to cryptocurrencies, except that its value is fixed by the central bank and is equivalent to the country's fiat currency. Many countries are developing CBDCs, and some have even implemented them.

How do I open my CBDC account? ›

How to register for CBDC?
  1. Click on start registration after reading and accepting the Terms & Conditions.
  2. Verify the SIM card for the registered mobile number.
  3. Click on Set App PIN and authenticate with your device password (PIN, Face Unlock, or Fingerprint)
  4. Enter your name in the field provided and click on Choose Wallet.
Nov 28, 2023

What is the difference between digital cash and digital currency? ›

What distinguishes digital currency from the existing electronic currency in bank accounts is that digital currency never assumes physical form, unlike electronic money. They are generally handled, preserved and exchanged using digital computer systems, particularly those connected to the Internet.

Will digital currency replace cash? ›

Will a U.S. CBDC replace cash or paper currency? The Federal Reserve is committed to ensuring the continued safety and availability of cash and is considering a CBDC as a means to expand safe payment options, not to reduce or replace them.

Is CBDC good or bad? ›

Put simply, a CBDC would most likely be the single largest assault to financial privacy since the creation of the Bank Secrecy Act and the establishment of the third‐​party doctrine. The threat to freedom that a CBDC could pose is closely related to its threat to privacy.

Is the United States going to a digital currency? ›

U.S. President Joe Biden ordered officials to look into a digital dollar in 2022 but it has become a divisive political issue with Biden's Republican rival in this year's U.S. election race, Donald Trump, vowing not to allow it.

Is the digital dollar going to happen? ›

10 Years of Decentralizing the Future

Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are coming, but a digital dollar is unlikely in the near term, Bank of America (BAC) said in a report on Monday.

Will cash become obsolete? ›

If it's been a long time since you pulled out actual dollars and coins to pay for something — here's a conversation for you. It might seem like cash is slowly becoming obsolete. But, Brett Scott says it's a false narrative that we're all pining for a cashless society.

Is CBDC traceable? ›

The other distinguished feature is that the proposed system achieves the anonymity against the commercial banks, while enabling the central bank to support user tracing and double-spending prevention.

What is the price of CBDC coin? ›

How much is 1 CBDC worth in INR? As of now, the price of 1 CBDC (CBDC) in Indian Rupee (INR) is about ₹0.003626.

Can you mine CBDC? ›

Currently, no CBDCs or central bank digital currencies can be mined. However, creating a proof-of-work, mineable CBDC could be an attractive, yet highly controversial possibility and could lead to the creation of a semi-decentralized CBDC.

What are the disadvantages of digital money? ›

Lack of Regulation: Digital currencies are not regulated by governments or financial institutions, which can make them more susceptible to fraud and illegal activities. The lack of regulation also makes it difficult for users to seek legal recourse in the event of fraud or theft.

What is the future of paper money? ›

Although paper-based currencies are becoming less popular, they will likely stick around for the foreseeable future. Dollars and cents may become harder to use, but as with many obsolete technologies, there are enough users to ensure demand doesn't disappear completely.

How do banks store digital money? ›

Digital currency may be recorded on a distributed database on the internet, a centralized electronic computer database owned by a company or bank, within digital files or even on a stored-value card.

How many types of digital currency are there? ›

Digital money streamlines financial infrastructure, making it cheaper and faster to conduct monetary transactions. It can also make it easier for central banks to implement monetary policy. Examples of types of digital money are central bank digital currencies, cryptocurrency, and stablecoins.

What is the second digital currency? ›

Bitcoin continues to lead the pack of cryptocurrencies in terms of market capitalization, user base, and popularity. Other virtual currencies, such as Ethereum, are helping to create decentralized financial (DeFi) systems.

Which central bank digital currency already exists? ›

3 countries have fully launched a CBDC—the Bahamas, Jamaica and Nigeria. The Eastern Caribbean Currency Union—consisting of 8 countries—halted availability of DCash due to technical issues and is developing a new pilot. There is a new high of 36 ongoing CBDC pilots, including the digital euro.

What is the US digital central bank currency? ›

CBDC is generally defined as a digital liability of a central bank that is widely available to the general public. Today in the United States, Federal Reserve notes (i.e., physical currency) are the only type of central bank money available to the general public.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Corie Satterfield

Last Updated:

Views: 5512

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Corie Satterfield

Birthday: 1992-08-19

Address: 850 Benjamin Bridge, Dickinsonchester, CO 68572-0542

Phone: +26813599986666

Job: Sales Manager

Hobby: Table tennis, Soapmaking, Flower arranging, amateur radio, Rock climbing, scrapbook, Horseback riding

Introduction: My name is Corie Satterfield, I am a fancy, perfect, spotless, quaint, fantastic, funny, lucky person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.