Valuing safety and privacy in retail central bank digital currency
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| Valuing safety and privacy in retail central bank digital currency | 1.56 MB |
This paper explores the merits of introducing a retail central bank digital currency (CBDC) in Australia, focusing on the extent to which consumers would value having access to a digital form of money that is even safer and potentially more private than commercial bank deposits.
To conduct the exploration, the authors of this paper run a discrete choice experiment, which is a technique designed specifically for assessing public valuations of goods without markets. The results suggest that the average consumer attaches no value to the added safety of a CBDC. This is consistent with bank deposits in Australia already being perceived as a safe form of money, and physical cash issued by the Reserve Bank of Australia continuing to be available as an alternative option. Privacy settings of a CBDC, which can take various forms, look more consequential for the CBDC value proposition. The authors find no clear relationship between safety or privacy valuations and the degree of consumers’ cash use.