Defaultable debt
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Central bank digital currency (CBDC) - government debt - default.
In the context of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), defaultable debt refers to conventional government debt.
Conventional government debt, the argument goes, is a liability of the government that carries the possibility of default.
By contrast, a CBDC is not defaultable.
- CBDC can reduce government financing costs
- "CBDC issuance against government debt can reduce government financing costs in two ways.
- First, by increasing the share of financing that pays the lower interest rate on CBDC.
- And second, by reducing the outstanding stock of defaultable government debt and thereby reducing all equilibrium interest rates...
- As argued by Kumhof et al. (2020), government debt is defaultable and is therefore a liability of the government, while CBDC is not defaultable and is not a liability of the government but rather a hybrid instrument that is closer to equity (in the nation) rather than debt."
- CBDC policies in open economies - BIS Working Paper No 1086 - April 2023 - p24..
See also
- Bank for International Settlements (BIS)
- Blockchain
- Britcoin
- Central bank
- Central bank digital currency (CBDC)
- Central bank money
- Commercial bank money
- Currency
- Debt
- Default
- Digital currency
- Digital Dollar Project (DDP)
- Digital euro
- Digital public money
- Distributed ledger
- e-krona
- e-money
- European System of Central Banks
- Fiat currency
- Gilts
- Gold standard
- Hybrid
- Interest rate
- Monetary
- Money
- Multi-CBDC arrangement
- Payment Interface Provider (PIP)
- Project Icebreaker
- Project Mariana
- Retail central bank digital currency (rCBDC)
- Sand Dollar
- Sovereignty
- Stablecoin
- Wholesale central bank digital currency (wCBDC)