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At the Cato Institute, Norbert Michel explains how central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) are about control. He writes about the dangers of such a creation:

As aย starting point, Iย want to distinguish between aย wholesale CBDC and retail CBDC.

With aย wholesale CBDC, banks can electronically transact with each other using aย liability of the central bank. Because that is essentially what banks do now, transact and settle (electronically) using reserve accounts held at the Fed, there arenโ€™t very many new and interesting wholesale CBDC policy issues. (Basically, the Fed has had aย wholesale CBDC for decades.)

While Americans have long held money predominantly in digital formโ€”for example in bank accounts recorded as computer entries on commercial bank ledgersโ€”a CBDC would differ from existing digital money available to the general public because aย CBDC would be aย liability of the Federal Reserve, not of aย commercial bank.

This featureโ€“making electronic transactions using aย liability of the Federal Reserveโ€“is central to why Congress should make sure that the Fed never issues aย retail CBDC. The problem is that the federal government, not privately owned commercial banks, would be responsible for issuing deposits. And while this fact might seem like aย feature instead of bug, itโ€™s aย major problem for anything that resembles aย free society. (Paper currency is also aย liability of the Fed, but that fact means very little with freely circulating fiat money, especially when private banks issue deposits.)

Some CBDC supporters argue that privately issued money can coexist with aย CBDC, but this view is extremely shortโ€โ€‹sighted. Even most central banks fear that providing accounts directly to consumersย risks disintermediating the financial system, aย fear that surely helps explainย Jay Powellโ€™sย public stanceย on retail CBDCs. It also helps explain the Fedโ€™s fascination with an โ€œintermediatedโ€ CBDC, whereby private banks have the privilege of servicing the consumersโ€™ needs even though the liability remains with the central bank. Ultimately that system is no better. (At best, it would slow the disintermediation while entrenching aย group of privileged firms).

Regardless, the two forms of money cannot peacefully coexistย unlessย the government hands out special privileges or subsidies. The two electronic mediums would be near perfect substitutes, and the main difference for consumers and merchants is that the Fedโ€™s version would automatically come with zero credit or liquidity risk. Private firms canโ€™t compete on that dimension, and they (unlike the Fed) have to recover their costs to stay in business.

The Fedโ€™s report evenย acknowledges this highย degree of substitutability:

Banks currently rely (in large part) on deposits to fund their loans. Aย widely available CBDC would serve as aย closeโ€”or, in the case of an interestโ€โ€‹bearing CBDC, near-perfectโ€”substitute for commercial bank money.

The only problem with this statement is that it says nothing about the degree of substitution between aย non-interest bearing CBDC and commercial bank money. Commercial bank money that serves as aย medium of exchange generally earns little to no interest, so even aย nonโ€โ€‹interestโ€โ€‹bearing CBDC is aย nearโ€โ€‹perfect substitute for commercial bank money.

Still, the interestโ€โ€‹bearing version is particularly relevant to the policy discussion.

The Fedโ€™s current operating framework depends on paying interest to banks for their reserves. No version of reality exists without political pressure for the Fed to pay individual CBDC holdersย at leastย the same rate of interest as it pays banks on reserves, and even that level of payment increases the risk of disintermediation.

Similarly, the political pressure will always be to expand the pool of people using the CBDC. While CBDC proponents currently speak of helping only the โ€œunbankedโ€ and the โ€œunderserved,โ€ there is absolutely no chance that those groups wonโ€™t soon be more broadly defined. (Apparently, thereโ€™s also no chance that CBDC proponents will acknowledge that broader economic problems, not aย lack of digital money, keep these folks out of the banking system. But thatโ€™s another column.)

And the political reality is that CBDC advocates want to use public funds to provide something (money) at aย lower cost than the private sector. Setting aside the incredibly rich irony that government rules and regulations are aย primary driver of that cost in the first place, as well as the fiction that the government providing something means the cost is actually lower, this policy equates money with aย public good. That is, CBDC advocates do not care if the private banking system is completely disintermediatedโ€“they want the government to provide money.

But money itself is not aย public good. The fact that its production has been increasingly encroached upon by the government is irrelevant. And the fact that something called aย CBDC even exists is only due to payment innovations that occurred in the private market. The CBDC itself is mainly the governmentโ€™s attempt to protect its privileged position and exert more control over money.

The problem is that there is no limit to the level of control that the government could exert over people if money is purely electronicย andย provided directly by the government. Aย CBDC would give federal officials full control over the money going intoโ€“and coming out ofโ€“every personโ€™s account.

Action Line: Americans don’t want or need the Fed to have more control over their money. They really just want the government out of their way so they can run their businesses and take care of their families. If you’re tired of the government and the Fed getting further and further into your affairs, stick with me.

Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย