Central bank digital currency, loan supply, and bank failure risk: a microeconomic approach

被引:0
|
作者
Jooyong Jun
Eunjung Yeo
机构
[1] Dongguk University,Department of Economics
[2] Chung-Ang University,School of Business Administration, College of Business and Economics
来源
关键词
Central bank digital currency; Bank failure risk; Loan supply; D02; E51; E58; G21;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), which are legal tenders in digital form, are expected to reduce currency issuance and circulation costs and broaden the scope of monetary policy. In addition, these currencies may also reduce consumers’ need for conventional demand deposits, which, in turn, increases banks’ loan provision costs because deposits require higher rates of return. We use a microeconomic banking model to investigate the effects of introducing an economy-wide, account-type CBDC on a bank’s loan supply and its failure risk. Given that a CBDC is expected to lower the cost of liquidity circulation and become a strong substitute for demand deposits, both the loan supply and the bank failure risk increase. These increases are countered by subsequent increases in the rates of return on term deposits and loans, which, in turn, reduce the loan supply and thus bank failure risk. These offsetting forces lead to no significant change in banking, as long as the rate of return on loans is below a certain threshold. However, once the rate is above the threshold, bank failure risk increases, thereby undermining banking stability. The problem is more pronounced when the degree of pass-through of funding costs to the loan rate is high and the profitability of a successful project is low. Our results imply that central banks wishing to introduce an economy-wide, account-type CBDC should first monitor yields on bank loans and consider policy measures that induce banks to maintain adequate liquidity reserve levels.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Central bank digital currency, loan supply, and bank failure risk: a microeconomic approach
    Jun, Jooyong
    Yeo, Eunjung
    [J]. FINANCIAL INNOVATION, 2021, 7 (01)
  • [2] Central bank digital currency and bank earnings management using loan loss provisions
    Ozili, Peterson K.
    [J]. DIGITAL POLICY REGULATION AND GOVERNANCE, 2023, 25 (03) : 206 - 220
  • [3] Central Bank Digital Currency, Credit Supply, and Financial Stability
    Kim, Young Sik
    Kwon, Ohik
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MONEY CREDIT AND BANKING, 2023, 55 (01) : 297 - 321
  • [4] The Economics of Central Bank Digital Currency
    Kshetri, Nir
    [J]. COMPUTER, 2021, 54 (06) : 53 - 58
  • [5] Blockchain and central bank digital currency
    Zhang, Tao
    Huang, Zhigang
    [J]. ICT EXPRESS, 2022, 8 (02): : 264 - 270
  • [6] Central bank digital currency: Payment choices and commercial bank profitability
    Son, Jaemin
    Ryu, Doojin
    Webb, Robert I.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, 2023, 90
  • [7] Central bank digital currency: When price and bank stability collide
    Schilling, Linda
    Fernandez-Villaverde, Jesus
    Uhlig, Harald
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MONETARY ECONOMICS, 2024, 145
  • [8] Central bank digital currency: Central banking for all?
    Fernandez-Villaverde, Jesus
    Sanches, Daniel
    Schilling, Linda
    Uhlig, Harald
    [J]. REVIEW OF ECONOMIC DYNAMICS, 2021, 41 : 225 - 242
  • [9] The economic law of (central bank) digital currency
    Zatti, Filippo
    [J]. LAW AND FINANCIAL MARKETS REVIEW, 2022, 16 (03): : 253 - 265
  • [10] Informal economy and central bank digital currency
    Oh, Eun Young
    Zhang, Shuonan
    [J]. ECONOMIC INQUIRY, 2022, 60 (04) : 1520 - 1539