Working Paper

Central Bank Digital Currency: When Price and Bank Stability Collide

Linda Schilling, Jesús Fernández-Villaverde, Harald Uhlig
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8773

A central bank digital currency, or CBDC, may provide an attractive alternative to traditional demand deposits held in private banks. When offering CBDC accounts, the central bank needs to confront classic issues of banking: conducting maturity transformation while providing liquidity to private customers who suffer “spending” shocks. We analyze these issues in a nominal version of a Diamond and Dybvig (1983) model, with an additional and exogenous price stability objective for the central bank. While the central bank can always deliver on its nominal obligations, runs can nonetheless occur, manifesting themselves either as excessive real asset liquidation or as a failure to maintain price stability. We demonstrate an impossibility result that we call the CBDC trilemma: of the three goals of efficiency, financial stability (i.e., absence of runs), and price stability, the central bank can achieve at most two.

CESifo Category
Monetary Policy and International Finance
Keywords: central bank digital currency, monetary policy, bank runs, financial intermediation, inflation targeting, CBDC trilemma
JEL Classification: E580, G210