Why central banks want to launch digital currencies | CNBC Reports - YouTube

Channel: CNBC International

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In 1694 the Bank of England became the first public bank to regularly issue banknotes
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as an alternative to coins, as a means of payment.
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Three centuries later, it’s primarily tasked with maintaining price stability,
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much like any other central bank across the world.
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But these cautious institutions are now buzzing with talk of a revolutionary concept,
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a form of money you cannot see: central bank digital currencies.
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When you ask central banks around the world whether they are exploring CBDC,
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one year ago the answer was 80% of them were exploring, and now it's nearly 90%.
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Last year, 40% were experimenting and now it's 60%.
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The vast majority of central banks are exploring CBDC.
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The idea of digital money is not new. Many of us use debit and credit cards
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or payments apps for transactions, but what would make a central bank digital currency different?
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One of the big financial developments over the last few years has been the rise in popularity of cryptocurrencies,
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with one in particular, bitcoin, standing out.
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Following Tesla’s announcement that it bought $1.5 billion worth of bitcoin in February 2021,
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the volatile cryptocurrency’s price surged to new highs, giving it a theoretical market capitalization
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that is even larger than the world's two largest payments processing companies: Visa and MasterCard.
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Unlike traditional money, cryptocurrencies are not issued by a central bank,
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but rather via a decentralized network of computers, typically using blockchain technology.
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Even Facebook is trying to get in on the act with the 2019 announcement that it would develop its own digital currency,
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known at the time as Libra and now rebadged as Diem.
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And so at that point central bankers started to realize they were really under some threat.
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And the question became, if we can't beat them, do we join them?
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Investors in bitcoin believe that because there is a theoretical cap on the number of bitcoins that can ever be mined,
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the cryptocurrency will become increasingly valuable at a time when central banks have been
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printing more money than ever before to arrest the economic fallout from the pandemic.
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That's why people sometimes call bitcoin ‘digital gold’.
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Many central banks are worried that the widespread adoption
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of these independent cryptocurrencies could weaken their control over the financial system.
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This could cause financial instability, especially because cryptocurrencies do not have
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the legal or the regulatory safeguards that central bank money does. So why not issue a digital currency of their own?
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Currently, regular bank deposits, cash and cryptocurrencies issued by the private sector,
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such as Diem and Bitcoin, all have a few features that make them useful,
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but the hope is that publicly available CBDCs would have all these desirable characteristics.
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Unlike your savings in a commercial bank, which rely on the bank’s promise to fulfill,
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CBDCs are recognized by law and backed by the power of the central bank, which cannot go bankrupt.
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For example, if a commercial bank collapses, part of your savings could potentially be wiped out.
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But this wouldn’t be the case for CBDCs, which could be as trusted as cash, as convenient as a payment app,
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yet also benefit from the same blockchain technology which underpins cryptocurrencies.
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And just like cash, CBDCs could be distributed through commercial banks, avoiding too much disruption to the financial system
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or the central bank having to deal directly with many millions of citizens and businesses.
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Think of bank notes, which are the closest equivalent to central bank digital currencies that we have today.
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Except that they are on paper, of course. This is money that is issued by the central bank
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and used daily in retail payments. The central bank sells bank notes to the commercial banks,
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and then the commercial banks distribute bank notes through ATMs to their clients.
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This means that everyone could have access to this digital currency, which could bring a lot of benefits.
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It could make payments faster, allowing for immediate settlements
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and no processing delays. And it could also make payments cheaper.
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In the U.S., the aggregate cost of making retail payments ranges from 0.5% to 0.9% of GDP.
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Digital currencies would reduce those costs.
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It also means that more people could have access to electronic payments.
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Currently, over 1.5 billion adults across the globe don’t have access to the financial system
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and even in an advanced economy such as the U.S., more than 6% of Americans don't have a bank account.
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Issuing digital currencies could also make it easier for governments to deliver stimulus checks,
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or even go one step further and make targeted payments to those deemed most in need.
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So how soon could central bank digital currencies become a reality?
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China is the major economy which is most advanced in its CBDC development.
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The People’s Bank of China has been running tests of its digital currency since April 2020
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with the help of four banks in the country. Tens of thousands of consumers have already
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been involved with the pilot, spending two billion yuan in over four million transactions.
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For China, it could also be a means of re-asserting control over a financial system
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challenged by the rapid growth of fintech companies
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Ant Pay and WeChat, these are the dominant payment technologies in China,
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and they are in the hands of Alibaba and Tencent, and if Beijing can wrest that back then I think they will.
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And the way that it’s set up, the e-yuan, is that it will still be effectively very integrated
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with the commercial banks but it is effectively a direct challenge to the payment technologies,
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they are trying to ultimately displace them. The e-yuan's going to have its own digital wallet
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at the commercial bank and over time people will probably just find it more convenient
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to use that, and thereby displacing Ant Pay, for example.
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There may also be a geopolitical consideration for China, providing a mechanism to shift away from using the U.S. dollar.
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There is no doubt that Beijing views the U.S. dollar as a strategic advantage the U.S. has.
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The problem is that most of the trade, the real world trade, is denominated and invoiced in U.S. dollars, right,
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and China sees this and it's hard for them to sort of push renminbi into the global financial system,
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the global trading system, but they’re trying.
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But if they had a digital currency that would be potentially a really fascinating angle.
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So you can see, if it has got a technological advantage, that perhaps this is a way for people to think
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about the renminbi in a different way and perhaps, you know, ultimately start to chip away at hegemonic status of the dollar.
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But it's not just China.
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The European Central Bank has plans for a digital euro, although it may be a few years before it is available.
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We are going to have to address all the issues of anti-money laundering, financing of terrorism,
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privacy of users and all their information, the appropriate technology that will carry that digital currency,
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and this is, you know, a project that could probably take us, two, three, four years before it is launched.
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This has got people wondering whether issuing a central bank digital currency
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could interfere with the effectiveness of monetary policy.
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Central banks have addressed CBDCs so far, really as part of a payments discussion.
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That’s a discussion for monetary policy committees, for the ECB governing council,
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whether they want to use CBDC or not, but it’s too early to have that discussion.
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But theoretically if the central bank wanted, they could also pass on negative rates
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to the holders of central bank digital currencies?
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Think of CBDC as being the future of bank notes, bank notes do not bear interest.
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And so, if you follow that line of reasoning then CBDC should not bear interest.
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And if you want CBDC to bear interest then you're creating something different.
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A lot depends on how much people would use CBDCs, and no central bank wants them
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to completely replace traditional cash, but rather to compliment it.
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One risk associated with CBDCs is that in an extreme situation, such as after a financial crash,
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you could see people withdrawing their deposits from commercial banks
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and opting to store their money in digital currencies backed by the central bank.
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Trouble would be if CBDC would replace bank deposits in a large amount
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because then what happens is that savers could shift their savings from bank account to CBDC.
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Then banks could have a problem for funding. This might have an effect on the financing of whole economy.
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People can shift saving from bank account to CBDC just with a click. This would be very dangerous obviously.
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As we move towards a more cashless society, will central bank digital currencies ever become
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as trusted and as convenient as bank notes? Quite possibly, though it may take months, maybe even years.
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The trust in private money is built on the trust in the currency
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and the fact that behind that there is a central bank which has tools to keep the value of the currency.
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We have to buy this trust and that's why we need to stay in the economy
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and the way to stay in the economy is to make sure people trust us.
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Thank you for watching. Would you ever use a central bank digital currency?
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Let us know in the comments, and don't forget to subscribe.