News Release

Can introducing a central bank digital currency improve social welfare?

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Wiley

While cash is issued in the form of physical paper and coins, central bank digital currency (CBDC) involves recording transaction information in a digital ledger kept by the central bank. A study published in Economic Inquiry examines how introducing CBDC affects welfare in an economy in which tax evasion occurs in cash transactions.

By building a model in which cash and CBDC can both be used, authors found that when there is economic inefficiency associated with tax evasion in cash transactions in an economy with a remittance constraint from the central bank to the government, introducing CBDC with strictly positive interest can remove the inefficiency and therefore improve welfare by discouraging tax evasion and rewarding tax payments.

“We also found that eliminating cash does not necessarily improve welfare in an environment where the size of government expenditure is not so large or tax evasion is not severe. This implies that when a currency with record-keeping technology can be introduced, it is not necessary to record all transactions because the central bank can make a transfer between transactions that use the record-keeping currency and transactions that do not,” said lead author Seungduck Lee, PhD, of Sungkyunkwan University, in South Korea.

URL Upon Publication: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ECIN.13091

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About the Journal

Published since 1962, Economic Inquiry is a highly regarded scholarly journal in economics publishing articles of general interest across the profession. Quality research that is accessible to a broad range of economists is the primary focus of the journal. Join our long list of prestigious authors, including more than 20 Nobel laureates.

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