What is money anyway?

This post is the first in a series called ‘central bank digital currencies 101: what are they and why should I care?’. This first post explores the different kinds of money in the economy today

Cash

You don’t have to be a Dan Brown style symbologist to take in the fact that this is an instrument of the state. It practically screams it at you. On the reverse of the note the fetching portrait of Jane Austen looks like a pastoral scene, but look closer and what looks like etching marks on an engraving behind her is actually the letters ‘BOE’ repeating again and again so many times that I gave up the will to count them all. Far from being a uniquely British phenomenon, the same is true of government bank notes around the world: cash is explicitly, overtly, smack you over the head obviously an instrument of the state.

Cash is also unusual in that it is highly private. Cash comes without memory, and cash is available to everyone. For this reason it is favoured by the tax averse, the privacy conscious, those avoiding transaction fees, and those who struggle to gain access to the banking system. (We’ll explore these features in a later post.)

Bank Deposits

Central Bank Reserves

Turns out there are no funny images about central banks. Let’s work on that

Central bank digital currencies

The idea behind a central bank digital currency is an alluringly simple one: to create a fourth type of money that takes some of the features of the types we already have. Tune in next week to find out more!

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Postscript:

Further reading:

Briefly noted:

4 responses to “What is money anyway?”

  1. I’ve spent a bit of time thinking about the conflict between bank deposits as 1) a safe store of value and 2) a low risk investment.

    Banks have an incentive to not get you thinking too much about the paltry amount of interest they’ll pay for your money. ‘Free in credit’ banking also fuzzes the lines too.

    It feels like a big step to move out of savings into investments, but I wonder if that wouldn’t feel as jarring if we better appreciated the price we pay for the ‘safe store’ bit, and so had an incentive to distribute our money further up the risk tiers

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    1. Yes, totally agree – especially when compared to lower-risk investments across very diversified bond funds etc.

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      1. And couldn’t hurt to have less of a siloed product mentality within banks too.. Hard to blur the lines when your bonus depends on it.. But I verge on rant 😉

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  2. […] This post is the first in a series called ‘central bank digital currencies 101: what are they and why should I care?’. This first post explores the different kinds of money in the economy today—Read more […]

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