The Guardian (USA)

Will central bank digital currencies dethrone the dollar?

- Barry Eichengree­n

This week marks the 50th anniversar­y of “the weekend that changed the world”, when the US president Richard Nixon suspended the dollar’s convertibi­lity into gold at a fixed price and rang down the curtain on the Bretton Woods internatio­nal monetary system. The subsequent half-century brought many surprises. From a monetary standpoint, one of the greatest was the dollar’s continued dominance as a vehicle for cross-border transactio­ns.

Under Bretton Woods, the dollar’s supremacy was readily explicable. The financial position of the US coming out of the second world war was impregnabl­e. Changes in the price at which dollars could be converted into gold were unthinkabl­e, first because of that financial strength and then, as the country’s monetary position weakened, because of the possibilit­y that one devaluatio­n would create expectatio­ns of another.

Many thought that Nixon’s move would diminish the dollar’s internatio­nal role. With the currency fluctuatin­g like any other, it would be too risky for banks, firms and government­s to put all their eggs in the dollar basket. They would thus diversify by holding more reserves and conducting more transactio­ns in other currencies.

Why this didn’t happen is now clear. The greenback had the advantage of incumbency: the fact that one’s customers and suppliers also used dollars made it awkward to move to alternativ­es. What’s more, the alternativ­es were – and remain – unattracti­ve.

As for the euro, there is a shortage of AAA-rated euro-denominate­d government bonds that central banks can hold as reserves. Those authoritie­s are therefore reluctant to allow those they regulate to do business in euros, since they are unable to lend the currency to banks and firms in need. China’s capital controls complicate internatio­nal use of the yuan, while there are justifiabl­e fears that the Chinese president,

Xi Jinping, could abruptly change the rules of access. And smaller economies’ currencies lack the scale to move a large volume of cross-border transactio­ns.

Some say that issuance of central bank digital currencies, or CBDCs, will transform the status quo. In this brave new digital world, any national currency will be as easy to use in crossborde­r payments as any other. This will not only erode the dollar’s dominance, the argument goes, but also greatly reduce transactio­n costs.

In fact, the conclusion doesn’t follow. Imagine that South Korea issues a “retail” CBDC that individual­s can hold in digital wallets and use in transactio­ns. A Colombian exporter of coffee to South Korea can then be paid in digital won, assuming of course that nonresiden­ts are permitted to download a Korean wallet. But that Colombian exporter will still need someone to convert those won into something more useful. If that someone is a correspond­ent bank with offices or accounts in New York, and if that something is the dollar, then we’re right back where we started.

Alternativ­ely, the Colombian and South Korean central banks could issue “wholesale” CBDCs. Both would transfer digital currency to domestic

commercial banks, which would deposit it into customer accounts. Now the Colombian exporter would end up with a credit in a South Korean bank rather than in a South Korean wallet – assuming this time that nonresiden­ts are allowed to have Korean bank accounts. But, again, the exporter would have to ask the South Korean bank to find a correspond­ent to convert that digital balance into dollars and then pesos in order to have something of use.

The gamechange­r would be if CBDCs were interopera­ble. The South Korean payer would then ask its bank for a won-denominate­d depository receipt, and a correspond­ing amount of CBDC in the payer’s account would be extinguish­ed. That depository receipt would be transferre­d into a dedicated internatio­nal “corridor”, where it could be exchanged for a peso depository receipt at the best rate offered by dealers licensed to operate there. Finally, the Colombian payee’s account would be credited with the correspond­ing number of digital pesos, extinguish­ing the depository receipt. Voilà! The transactio­n would be completed in real time at a fraction of the current cost without involving the dollar or correspond­ent banks.

Unfortunat­ely, the conditions for making this work are formidable. The two central banks would have to agree on an architectu­re for their digital corridor and jointly govern its operation. They would have to license and regulate dealers holding inventorie­s of currencies and depository receipts to ensure that the exchange rate inside the corridor didn’t diverge from that outside. And they would have to agree on who provides emergency liquidity, against what collateral, in the event of a serious order imbalance.

In a world of 200 currencies, arrangemen­ts of this type would require 200 factorial bilateral agreements, which is obviously unworkable. And corridors of many countries, though sometimes imagined, would require rules and governance arrangemen­ts considerab­ly more elaborate than those of the World Trade Organizati­on and the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. This, clearly, isn’t going to happen.

CBDCs are coming. But they won’t change the face of internatio­nal payments. And they won’t dethrone the dollar.

The game gamechange­r would be if central digital bank currencies were interopera­ble

 ??  ?? The alternativ­es to the dollar remain unattracti­ve. Photograph: Ozan Köse/AFP/Getty Images
The alternativ­es to the dollar remain unattracti­ve. Photograph: Ozan Köse/AFP/Getty Images

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