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The (Near) Future of Central Bank Digital Currencies

Risks and Opportunities for the Global Economy and Society

by Nicola Bilotta (Volume editor) Fabrizio Botti (Volume editor)
©2021 Edited Collection 202 Pages
Open Access
Series: Global Politics and Security, Volume 7

Summary

The value of global cashless payments has been radically increasing worldwide. Despite cash being the most used payment instrument in the world, technological innovation and new consumer preferences are decisively transforming the way consumers pay and manage money. The COVID-19 pandemic may also have been an accelerator of the cashless mega-trend. Private players currently dominate the digital payment ecosystem, urging central banks to seek solutions to ensure public access to legal tender if cash is phased out. In this context, the idea of a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) is gaining momentum. Nevertheless, there is a need to better understand the implications in terms of risks, benefits and potential costs of CBDCs. From privacy concerns to macroeconomic effects, these implications blur the boundaries of the payment and financial systems, challenging the core functions of our economy and society.

Table Of Contents

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • Figures
  • Tables
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: Nicola Bilotta and Fabrizio Botti
  • Chapter 1: CBDCs: The (Near?) Future of a Cashless Economy: Nicola Bilotta and Fabrizio Botti
  • Chapter 2: CBDC in the Broad Context of National Payments System Development: Massimo Cirasino
  • Chapter 3: Central Bank Digital Currency and the Future Financial System: Robleh Ali
  • Chapter 4: Central Bank Digital Currencies and Law: Steven L. Schwarcz
  • Chapter 5: The Digital Euro: Challenges and Opportunities: Franco Passacantando
  • Chapter 6: Digital Currency Initiatives on the African Continent: P.M.T. Masela
  • Chapter 7: China’s New Digital Currency: Implications for Renminbi Internationalization and the US Dollar: Jan Knoerich
  • Chapter 8: CBDCs and Stablecoins: The Scramble for (Controllable) Anonymity: Nicola Bilotta
  • Chapter 9: Digital Currency: A Global Regulatory Framework is Needed: Claude Lopez
  • Conclusion: Nicola Bilotta and Fabrizio Botti
  • Contributors
  • Abbreviations

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Lorenzo Kamel

Foreword

Digitalization has been changing the way how people use money, globally reducing the share of cash in transactions in favour of cards and e-money solutions. Despite digital and electronic payment systems having become key payment means, these solutions have not challenged the architecture nor the nature of traditional monetary systems. While decentralized cryptocurrencies have failed in reaching scale, remaining a niche market, the potential development of stablecoins issued by large private corporations could rapidly transform the current monetary systems. In this context of growing digitalization of payments, the discussion around the introduction of a retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) has gained momentum. Theoretically, CBDC could produce great efficiency gains, encourage contestability in payment systems, and foster financial inclusion. Notwithstanding, benefits come together with new risks which need to be addressed by central banks. CBDC’s underlying system could be differently designed – such as a two-layer system or one-layer system; token-based or account-based”, producing diversified issues and challenges. A set of risks lies in the possible negative effects on the banking industry, like the consequences of potential disintermediation, and in the operational and security challenges for central banks. Moreover, CBDCs raise concerns on the balance of power in society, potentially increasing the ability of governments to look into financial transactions, altering the anonymity that cash gives to citizens. Therefore, the development of CBDCs gives rise to several implications which blur the boundaries of the payment market, potentially transforming the core of the economy and society.

To shed some lights on the potential effects, risks and benefits around the development of CBDCs, the Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI) has promoted, in partnership with Intesa Sanpaolo and with the support of Intesa Sanpaolo and Bank of Italy, a research effort by putting together a very qualified and diversified group of experts who for more than a year exchanged their views and research on different aspects of this innovation. The result is this book which, I believe, provides readers with an extremely useful tool to get interesting and manifold insights on CBDCs, raising several opened questions to policymakers and regulators.

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Nicola Bilotta and Fabrizio Botti

Introduction

Global non-cash transactions reached 708.5 billion transactions in 2019, surged by 80% since 2014. Despite cash being the most used payment instrument in the world, technological innovation and new consumer preferences are radically transforming the way consumers pay and manage money. The COVID-19 pandemic may have also been an accelerator in consolidating cashless transactions by driving the growth of e-commerce and mobile/contactless transactions. Private players currently dominate the digital payment ecosystem, urging central banks to seek solutions to ensure public access to legal tender if cash is phased out. In this context, the idea of a central bank digital currency (CBDC) is gaining momentum – a central bank liability, denominated in an existing unit of account, which serves both as a medium of exchange and a store of value. The bulk of central banks surveyed by the Bank for International Settlements (80 per cent out of sixty-six central banks), representing 90 per cent of global output, are working on a CBDC. Nevertheless, there is a need to better understand the implications in terms of risks, benefits and potential costs of CBDCs. From privacy concerns to macroeconomic effects, these implications blur the boundaries of the payment and financial systems, challenging the core functions of our economy and society. The key questions are manifold: how will a CBCD affect banking industry models and financial markets? What are the benefits and risks of introducing a CBDC? Which are the different design and technical solutions a CBDC can offer? What is the play-off between privacy as a democratic freedom and the enforcement of AML rules in the frame of CBDCs?

The Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI), in partnership with Intesa Sanpaolo and with the support of Intesa Sanpaolo and the Bank of Italy, has carried out a research project to study the main economic and political implications of the development of CBDCs. The result of this analysis – conducted with a group of international experts – are presented in this book. These experts have participated actively in the research throughout the project and their contributions help to shed light on key specific issues and implications related to the development of CBDCs. The first chapter, by Nicola Bilotta and Fabrizio Botti, provides an overview of the approaches, features and implications of CBDCs. It briefly explores the current literature on CBDCs and provides concrete example of this innovation’s stage of development. The second chapter, by Massimo Cirasino, analyses in depth the conditions and factors to take into account when launching ←13 | 14→a CBDC. The third chapter, by Ali Robleh, explains how a CBDC system will shape the structure of the whole financial system. Steven Schwarcz’s Chapter 4 concentrates on how existing regulations will extend to CBDCs, investigating if this innovation will require further regulation if it is implemented, depending on the design of a CBDC system. The following three chapters take a closer look at geographical areas that are at the frontier in the field of digital currency. The fifth chapter, by Franco Passacantando, analyses the implications of a digital euro, focusing on its potential effects on the functioning of financial markets. The next chapter, by Tim Masela, details the opportunities and risks of CBDCs and digital currencies in Africa. The seventh chapter, by Jan Knoerich, analyses the features and implications of the Digital Currency/Electronic Payments (DCEP), China’s CBDC, domestically and internationally. The eighth chapter, by Nicola Bilotta, focuses on the political struggle to find a balance between anonymity and security in CBDCs systems, calling ultimately for multilateralism to ensure the transparency and fairness of CBDCs. The final chapter, by Claude Lopez, looks into the need for a global framework that meets all the challenges produced by the multiplication of private digital currencies and CBDCs.

Initiatives and projects on the developments of CBDCs are rolling out across the world. Any future CBDC system will need to ensure financial stability, competition and resilience, helping central banks to achieve their public policy objectives. The implementation of CBDCs will have a radical impact on the global economy, transforming, at least potentially, the way our society is organised. This book aims at shedding some light on the economic, financial and political implications of the development of CBDCs.

Details

Pages
202
Year
2021
ISBN (PDF)
9783034342919
ISBN (ePUB)
9783034342926
ISBN (MOBI)
9783034342933
ISBN (Softcover)
9783034342759
DOI
10.3726/b18087
Open Access
CC-BY
Language
English
Publication date
2021 (March)
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Warszawa, Wien, 2021. 202 pp., 18 fig. col., 2 tables.

Biographical notes

Nicola Bilotta (Volume editor) Fabrizio Botti (Volume editor)

Nicola Bilotta is a researcher at the Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI) in the international political economy area. Previously, he worked as a senior research analyst at The Banker Research Team (Financial Times), with which he still collaborates. He was associate fellow at the Seven Pillar Institute of Finance & Ethics and associate researcher at the Istituto di Alti Studi di Geopolitica e Scienze Ausiliari. Fabrizio Botti is Senior Fellow in the field of economics and finance at Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI) and Intesa Sanpaolo Fellow. He is also Research Fellow at Guglielmo Marconi University. He is core member of "Minerva - Laboratory on Gender Diversity and Gender Inequality" at the Department of Statistics of Sapienza University of Rome. Previously he was Marie Curie Fellow at the Faculty of Economics and Politics of University of Cambridge and Visiting Fellow at the Centre for African Studies of Florida University.

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Title: The (Near) Future of Central Bank Digital Currencies
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204 pages