Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn

Article List:

 

18 November 2021

FT: ECB's Panetta - The ECB’s case for central bank digital currencies


Sovereign money must continue to play its anchoring role in the digital era

Just as the postage stamp became less relevant with the arrival of the internet and email, so too could cash lose relevance in a digital economy.

The use of cash in payments is declining as people increasingly prefer to pay digitally and shop online. In the euro area, half of consumers now prefer to pay with cashless means of payment. Online sales have doubled since 2015. If these trends continue, cash could lose its pivotal role.

This has implications for the key role of central bank money in payments. Today, it is widely used by households and businesses for consumer and person-to-person transactions in the form of cash, and by financial institutions for wholesale transactions in the form of electronic deposits. But the role of cash is challenged by digitalisation, while the emergence of new technologies creates new possibilities for wholesale transactions.

To continue playing its role as the anchor of the monetary system, central bank money will need to respond to evolving needs. This means that work on central bank digital currencies must be intensified. Retail CBDCs are about creating the possibility for everyone to use central bank money for digital retail payments.

This is the focus of the European Central Bank’s project to develop a digital euro. Some people have argued that retail CBDCs would be redundant given the vast supply of private digital means of payments. In my view, the opposite is true. The smooth functioning of payments, which is critical for monetary and financial stability, ultimately depends on sovereign money continuing to play its anchoring role in the digital era.

So central banks must evolve with changing technologies, payment habits and financial ecosystems. Let me explain why. We are accustomed to using different forms of money interchangeably. We are confident that “one euro is one euro” whatever form it takes, and this allows payment systems to run smoothly and commerce to flow. But this “singleness” of money has not come about by chance. Confidence in private money — bank deposits, credit cards and e-payment solutions — rests on the ability to convert it, at par, into central bank money, which is the safest form of money available. Runs on private money start when this confidence disappears...

more at FT



© FT plc


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment