This Fintech Note aims to analyze how the issuance of central bank digital currency (CBDC) could affect monetary operations, which include central banks managing the demand and supply of reserves to achieve a desired stance of monetary policy. The note outlines three scenarios: CBDCs substituting cash, commercial bank deposits, and reserves, with implications varying based on design features and market developments. It discusses how these scenarios influence balance sheets and reserves, potentially drawing short-term interest rates away from the policy target and complicating liquidity forecasting. Furthermore, the note shows how central banks could calibrate monetary operations such as engaging in a fine-tuning operation and provide additional reserves on demand to ensure that central banks can maintain their monetary policy stance. Finally, careful design of CBDCs, such as setting criteria for access, holding quantity, and remuneration, can mitigate adverse effects on monetary operations.
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- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.5089/9798400289019.063
- ISBN
- 9798400289019
- ISSN
- 2664-5912
- Issue
- 007
- Pages
- 32
- Published in
- United States of America
- Series
- Fintech Notes No 2024/007
- Stock No
- FTNEA2024007
- Volume
- 2024
Table of Contents
- Contents 5
- AcronymsGlossary 6
- Introduction 7
- A Primer on Monetary Operations 9
- Implications of CBDC for Monetary Operations 12
- Three Scenarios of CBDC Substitution 12
- Box 1. Further Details on the Three Scenarios of CBDC Substitution 13
- Effects on Short-Term Interest Rates 15
- Adapting Monetary Operations and CBDC Designs 17
- Box 2. Cambodias Bakong System 18
- Box 3. The Bank of England Omnibus Accounts 21
- Box 4. Digital Euros Approach 23
- Box 5. CBDC and Seigniorage 24
- Considerations for Foreign Exchange Rate and Monetary-Targeting Regimes 25
- Box 6. Digitalization and Monetary Metrics The Case of M-Pesa in Kenya 26
- Conclusions 27
- References 28