Can central bank digital currencies help advance financial inclusion?
Nana Yaa Boakye-Adjei,
Raphael Auer,
Holti Banka,
Ahmed Faragallah,
Jon Frost,
Harish Natarajan and
Jermy Prenio
Additional contact information
Nana Yaa Boakye-Adjei: Digital Financial Services and Financial Inclusion Professional, Switzerland
Holti Banka: World Bank, USA
Ahmed Faragallah: World Bank, USA
Harish Natarajan: World Bank, USA
Jermy Prenio: Bank for International Settlements, Switzerland
Journal of Payments Strategy & Systems, 2023, vol. 17, issue 4, 433-447
Abstract:
Central banks around the world are considering how retail central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) may help to advance financial inclusion. While CBDCs are not a magic bullet, they could be a further tool to promote universal access to payments and other financial services if this goal features prominently in the design from the get-go. In particular, central banks can consider design options to: (1) promote innovation in the two-tiered financial system (eg allowing for non-bank payment service providers); (2) offer a robust and low-cost public sector technological basis (with novel interfaces and offline payments); (3) facilitate enrolment (via simplified due diligence and electronic know-your-customer processes) and data portability; and (4) foster interoperability (both domestically and across borders). Together, these features can address a range of specific barriers to financial inclusion: geographic remoteness, institutional and regulatory factors, economic and market structure issues, characteristics of vulnerability, lack of financial literacy and low trust in existing financial institutions. This paper draws on interviews with nine central banks with advanced work on CBDCs and financial inclusion — the Central Bank of the Bahamas, Bank of Canada, People’s Bank of China, Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, Bank of Ghana, Central Bank of Malaysia, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, National Bank of Ukraine and Central Bank of Uruguay. It gives concrete examples from the central banks’ work and discusses challenges, risks and regulatory and legal implications. It argues that while CBDCs hold promise for furthering financial inclusion, CBDC issuance may also require new laws and regulations to be enacted, or existing laws to be revised.
Keywords: digital currencies; financial inclusion; universal access; payments; central banks (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: E5 G2 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:aza:jpss00:y:2023:v:17:i:4:p:433-447
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