Autor
Fecha de publicación
30-nov-2021
Descripción física
9 p.
Resumen
Most Central Banks in the world are currently considering - or at least studying - the
launch of a Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC). For instance, on 14 July 2021
the European Central Bank decided to launch a two-year investigation phase of a
possible Digital Euro [European Central Bank (2021)]. Those announcements have
raised many expectations and also some concerns. There is a fear that once the
general public has easy access to the Central Bank balance sheet through electronic
means (in addition to physical banknotes), competition will increase on the deposit
taking activities of banks. This would compromise their funding, reduce their
profitability and destabilise their business models. The perspective of frequent and
ample bank runs would be very bad for financial stability.
These are legitimate concerns, especially in the euro area, where banks and bank
credit take a major role in financial intermediation. However, there is another side to
the issue. Central Bank money - and easy access to it - are crucial to financial
stability. Contemporary monetary systems are based on a close complementarity
between private and public money. CBDCs are necessary to preserve that equilibrium
in a rapidly transforming digital economy
Notas
Artículo de revista
Publicado en
Financial Stability Review / Banco de España, 41 (Autumn 2021), p. 11-19
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