Why Governments Want a Central Bank-Issued Digital Currency
by Xiong Yue
On January 20, 2016, People’s Bank of China
(PBoC) released an announcement on its website about its digital
currency conference. At the conference, the PBoC urged its digital
currency team to speed up effort and release its own digital currency quickly. Similarly, Bank of England, Bank of Canada,
and some other central banks also expressed similar intentions to or
claimed that they had considered issuing their own digital currencies.
Since its creation, Bitcoin and other digital currencies have inspired
the issuance of many private-issued and denationalized digital
currencies. Now, it looks like that the central bank-issued digital
currency is also becoming a global trend.
Why do central banks, which already fully control the issuance of currencies, need to bother with its own digital currency?
Well, this question is both interesting and
important. To answer it, we need first to understand some basics, the
Digital Currency 101:
Unlike Internet banking and third-party payment
services using traditional electronic payment tools to facilitate fiat
money transmission, digital currencies represent a new class of
technology. They are developed out of a number of brand new and
groundbreaking technologies — they are not tools to transmit money; they
are arguably money themselves. Among them, one particular kind utilizes
modern cryptography, earning its name crypto-currency. Bitcoin is an
example of this kind of digital currency. After its creation, the idea
inspired and led to many similar systems. Some commercial banks and
central banks also work on their own digital currencies. Depending on
their issuers, we can divide all digital currencies into three
categories:
1. Digital Currencies Issued by Non-Financial Institutions
In November, 2008, someone under the alias of
Satoshi Nakamoto invented a new technology called Blockchain and for the
first time introduced the concept of a peer-to-peer electronic cash
system, also known as Bitcoin.[1] On January 3, 2009, the code was
released. Due to its peer-to-peer and electronic nature, digital
currencies can be transferred directly between two individuals without a
centralized clearance house. Thus, it is a fast, low-cost, and
nationality-neutral payment system.
2. Commercial Banks-issued Digital Currency
Some large international financial institutions,
attracted by digital currency for its low cost, high speed, and
security, are also trying to utilize its underlying technology, known as
Blockchain, as the basis to build their own proprietary digital
currencies. Banks involved in such areas include UBS, Deutsche Bank,
Santander, and BNY Mellon, some of the most prestigious banks worldwide. Their
digital currencies are similar to the aforementioned ones, only they
have different issuers. Especially worth noting is most financial
institutions’ digital currencies are designed to meet their need for
fast settlement, rather than to challenge the financial status quo by replacing the central bank-issued fiat money.
3. Central Bank-issued Digital Currency
Some central banks, such as PBoC and Bank of
England, after having done some research on digital currency, also plan
to issue their own central bank-issued digital currencies (CBDCs).
Technologically, CBDC is similar to the aforementioned two, but due to
its pedigree, it might have greater economic implications and this is
exactly the outcome that PBoC intend by introducing CBDC.
There are at least three implications of CBDC, i.e., three reasons for CBDC to governments.
To Create a Cashless Society
Governments hate cash. This is to a great degree
the reason that the governments want the central banks to issue their
own digital currencies.
For government, although cash is the original
form of its fiat money, it has some obvious shortcomings. When compared
funds stored in financial institutions, cash is less controlled by the
government. Once cash leaves the banks, it becomes hard to trace. The
government can’t know the location of each bank note, who owns it, or
even if it still exists. This made cash easy to be used for drug
dealing, smuggling, tax evasion, money laundering, and even funding
terrorist activities. Meanwhile, cash owned by individuals can also be
the target of burglars and robbers.
What’s more important is that cash can undermine
the effectiveness of the government’s negative interest policy. When
the negative interest rates dropped to a unbearable level, savers would
abandon the convenience and security of depositing money in banks — they
may withdraw their money and store it at home in cash. This makes it
hard to implement the negative interest rate policy.
This is the very reason why the European Central
Bank decided to stop issuing the 500-euro note while Lawrence Summers,
the former US Treasury Secretary, advocated abolishing the 100-dollar
note — prior to it, the US already stopped issuing the 500-dollar note
and larger ones in 1945.
However, as long as the public still have the
ability to withdraw cash from banks, no matter how the government
restricts the use of cash, there will still be a large amount of cash
outside the government-controlled finance system. This is not something
that the government wants to see. But, in a society where central
bank-issued digital cash is fully adopted, CBDC can replace traditional
form of money and achieve the central bank’s goal of removing cash. Once
that comes true, the government can monitor its citizen’s personal
financials down to every single transaction and invalidate ones that are
deemed to be illegal. It also makes it impossible for people to
withdraw cash and store it at home in response to negative interest
rates. This will only serve to worsen the financial exploitation. Just
as Joseph T. Salerno pointed out in his article "Why Government Hates Cash":
Now the reason given by our rulers for suppressing cash is to keep society safe from terrorists, tax evaders, money launderers, drug cartels, and other villains real or imagined. The actual aim of the flood of laws restricting or even prohibiting the use of cash is to force the public to make payments through the financial system. This enables governments to expand their ability to spy on and keep track of their citizens’ most private financial dealings, in order to milk their citizens of every last dollar of tax payments that they claim are due.
Steal the Spotlight from Bitcoin and Other Private-issued Digital Currencies
The current monetary system is unfair, riddled
with flaws and built on shaky ground. Economists of the Austrian school,
among others, have gone to great efforts to explain this. The birth of
private digital currencies presented an opportunity to make a difference
by reforming money and the financial systems. The governments, however,
are inevitably threatened. They envy the attention that digital
currencies have received. But most governments were reluctant to declare
digital currencies as illegal since that would contradict their
perceived stance of being supportive of technological innovation.
Thus, although there is no unified stance among
different governments with respect to digital currencies, the difference
among them is merely a matter of degrees — there is not a single
government that has wholeheartedly embraced digital currencies. Those
egomaniacs want to divert the public attention away from digital
currencies by creating ones they can control themselves.
The outcome is that the government’s stances are
often in conflict with their own: On the one hand, they try to restrict
the development of digital currencies, on the other, they also actively
study and develop their own digital currencies modeled on Bitcoin. Take
China, for example. On December 5, 2013, the central bank stated, “In
order to protect the public’s right to property and ensure RMB’s legal
status as a legal tender and reduce anti-money laundering law, and
maintain financial stability.” The PBoC worked with the Ministry of
Industry and Information, China Banking Regulation Commission, China
Securities Regulation Commission, and China Insurance Regulation
Commission, and released a notice:
Although Bitcoin is often called “Money,” given it is not issued by any monetary authorities, they don’t have the status as a legal lender, thus is not a true currency. Judging by its nature, Bitcoin is a virtual good. It doesn’t have the same legal standing as currencies, and shouldn’t be allowed to be in circulation in the market like real currencies.No financial institutions and payment institutions should use Bitcoins to price their products and services. They shouldn’t buy or sell Bitcoin or seek to insure any Bitcoin-related services or Bitcoin itself. They should not provide their clients with Bitcoin-related services, directly or indirectly.
But this doesn't mean that the PBoC considers
digital currency as completely worthless; on the contrary, at their 2016
digital currency conference, they admitted that:
“…. We had established a dedicated research team starting in 2014, and
it believes that “… exploring the central bank issuing digital currency
has positive and real implications and fundamental historical meanings."
Replacing the genuine by releasing a copycat — this is certainly not the first time that a government has done such a thing.
To Achieve a More Accurate Monetary Policy
Central bankers — a bunch of social engineers —
have every confidence that they can regulate and control the economy by
manipulating monetary policies. Every time their efforts fail, however,
they try to scapegoat the market. For example, they would increase
monetary supply as a way to give stimulus; however, the money meant to
stimulate the real economy was often funneled into the financial market
and used for purposes that contradict its original one by the “greedy”
businessmen. In comparison, digital currencies can afford them better
control of monetary policy. This is more than sending “money from the
helicopter” to people’s wallets; given that these digital currencies are
programmable; the government can even control exactly how to spend this
new money using scripts.
For example, if the government plans to
subsidize certain farms, say some corn farms, to support this sector of
agriculture, they can directly add a certain amount of money to the
wallets of some farms, for instance 100 million dollars and program this
money to be sent to certain fertilizer merchants at a certain time, and
that each can only spend maximum of 10 million dollars per year, and in
this way, they can make sure that the farmers won’t squander the
windfalls, and that this money won’t flow to other sectors, for
instance, the stock market or real estate market.
Even though this kind of monetary policy is
bound to fail, from the perspective of government officials, CBDC
provides them a better tool. For them, with the help of the CBDC, they
can plan and manage the economy better.
Conclusion
Although sharing some similar traits with
Bitcoin and other free digital currencies, CBDC is in essence the
opposite of what Bitcoin represents with the following three
implications. (1) With central banks being the issuers of new digital
currencies, the government may achieve its goal of building a cash-less
society, and, for the general public, the financial exploitation they
are subject to are likely to worsen. (2) CBDC will steal the spotlight
of Bitcoin and therefore help governments to repress the digital
currency revolution. (3) CBDC may be used as a tool for a more accurate
monetary policy (although such effort is bound to fail in the long run).
Confronting this upcoming huge threat, lovers of liberty should stay
vigilant and work on countermeasures early.
Tyler Xiong Yue
is a Master's degree student studying under Jesús Huerta de Soto, and
is a translator of many Mises Institute essays and books into Chinese.
[1] Some argue that Satoshi Nakamoto is an alias for a group of people.
[1] Some argue that Satoshi Nakamoto is an alias for a group of people.

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