Economic News

IMF: Digital Cash Could Erode Monetary Policy Impact

EDITOR NOTE: Following China’s lead (actually, Facebook took the first step), central banks are now shifting digital currency initiatives into high gear. The IMF is warning that “currency substitution,” more like “currency contamination,” may usurp the power of central banks to “control liquidity” on a local level. Of course, the IMF is all about maintaining monetary control and creating liquidity--none of this having to do with real money. Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) also pose a threat to the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights; eventually threatening its prospects of becoming the world’s primary central bank. Currency substitution introduces competition; both gold and silver being the most sound of tangible assets. But when a central bank tries to conflate substitution with contamination, then its a claim toward power, usurping not the currencies themselves but rather your financial and transactional freedoms.

Central bank digital cash could see foreign currencies displace domestic money in national economies, with adoption of the tech also potentially boosting illicit capital flows without proper safeguards, the International Monetary Fund said on Monday.

Central banks around the world began looking closely at their own digital currencies, known as CBDCs, after Facebook last year unveiled its yet-to-be-launched Libra stablecoin.

Guiding their research is the question of who will control money in the future, with many fearing the loss of control over payment systems if privately issued currencies such as Libra become widely adopted.

In a report, the IMF said the economic and policy consequences of CBDCs and Big Tech-issued stablecoins depends on adoption - something hard to predict, with CBDCs still far from a reality in major economies and the fate of Libra unclear.

CBDCs and stablecoins could raise pressure for "currency substitution," where foreign currencies displace domestic currencies for local use, it said.

Currency substitution can erode authorities' control over domestic liquidity, reducing the stability of money demand and potentially weakening the impact of monetary policy.

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Without adequate safeguards, foreign CBDCs and stablecoins could also boost illicit flows and make it harder for local authorities to enforce checks on capital movement, it added.

Still, the benefits of CBDCs and stablecoins for cross-border transactions are "conceptually clear" but as yet hard to quantify, the report said, citing lower transaction costs and the chance for financial services to leverage transaction data.

CBDC projects have switched into higher gear in the past year, though most are still at an early stage. China, ahead of other major economies in experimenting with CBDCs, on Sunday completed its largest trial to date.

Issuing CBDCs may also help currencies to internationalise or achieve reserve currency status, the IMF said.

China has publicly said it aims to become the first to issue one to reduce its dependence on the global dollar payment system, sparking concerns from Japan that it was seeking first-mover advantage.

Originally posted on Yahoo! Finance

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