Bank Of England Paper Quantifies Benefits Of Central Bank Issued Digital Currency

Bank Of England Paper Quantifies Benefits Of Central Bank Issued Digital Currency

A staff working paper written for the Bank of England postulates that central bank issued digital currency (CBDC) of 30% of GDP could permanently raise GDP by as much as 3% from lower real interest rates, taxes and monetary transaction costs, according to a recently published paper. The CBDC would be issued against government bonds. The paper, “The macroeconomics of central bank issued digital currencies” by John Barrdear and Michael Kumhof, examines the macroeconomic impact of a central bank issuing electronic, national-currency-denominated and interest-bearing access to its balance sheet....


Related News

Bank of England Does the Groundwork for Central Bank Backed Digital Currency

The Bank of England has proposed the introduction of a central bank backed digital currency alongside fiat banknotes. The idea of creating a central bank backed digital currency is not a new thing. The digital currency community and central banks of various nations have floated this idea at one point or another. While most nations are yet to act upon it, the Bank of England is already doing the groundwork for such an implementation. A ‘Staff Working Paper‘ published this month as part of the research commissioned by the Bank of England reports that introduction of a Bank of England backed....

Central Bankers: If You Can’t Beat Bitcoin, Print it and Control it

Ahead of a session of key cryptocurrency experts in the UK witnessing before the Economic Affairs Committee of the Parliament on Tuesday July 19 to explore blockchain technology, the Bank of England has released a research paper that studied the macroeconomic consequences of issuing central bank digital currency (CBDC). “I don’t see how banks could compete,” said Peter Stella, former central-banking head of the International Monetary Fund and director of Stellar Consulting LLC. The Wall Street Journal suggests that a central-bank-issued bitcoin would be a “means for policy makers to....

Central Bank Digital Currencies Could Boost GDP, Bank of England Says

The Bank of England has released new research suggesting that a central bank-issued digital currency could lead to an increase in gross domestic product. The conclusions were drawn from a working paper published today that examined how a central bank-backed digital currency (referred to as a CBDC in the paper) could yield macroeconomic benefits, while providing banking regulators a clearer picture of the financial system. The authors wrote: "First, it leads to an increase in the steady-state level of GDP of almost 3%, due to reductions in real interest rates, in distortionary tax....

Bank of England Official Discusses Implications of Central Bank Digital Currencies

Deputy Governor of the Bank of England Ben Broadbent has spoken out on the implications of a central bank digital currency (CBDC) for the financial system as we know it. In Broadbent’s lecture at the London School of Economics on March 2, he focused on what a central bank digital currency could look like, and potential economic implications of introducing one. Central Bank Digital Currency A CBDC could be issued by a central bank to widen access to the central bank’s balance sheet. Liabilities on the central bank’s balance sheet include banknotes and commercial bank reserves, and are the....

'Sovereign' Blockchains Will Change Monetary Policy, Bank Paper Argues

A new research paper published by South Africa’s FirstRand Bank explores the world of central banks and blockchains, suggesting that the technology could usher in a "new epoch" of monetary oversight. Titled “The Advent of Crypto Banking”, the report examines the question of central bank-issued digital currencies, a topic that recently came to the fore when the European Central Bank announced this week that it was jointly exploring the concept in partnership with Japan’s central bank, the Bank of Japan. Those two institutions are expected to publish research of their own next....