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The nature of money in a convertible currency world

Sissoko, Carolyn

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Authors

Carolyn Sissoko



Abstract

In a world where the means of exchange is convertible into the numeraire consumption good at a fixed rate, no one wants to hold money over time – and due to convertibility there is no means by which the Friedman rule can generate deflation. This is the environment we study in this paper in order to demonstrate that there is still a way to reach the first-best: institutionalize the naked shorting of the unit of account, or in other words establish a banking system.
To motivate the benefits of a banking system, the environment has real productivity shocks that are constantly changing the optimal level of economic activity, so the optimal quantity of money is inherently stochastic. Efficiency in such an environment requires the capacity to expand the money supply on an “as needed” basis. We show how a debt-based payments system that relies on banks to certify the individual debtors’ IOUs addresses the monetary problem.
This model explains (i) central bank monetary policy as a means of stabilizing the banking system and (ii) usury laws as means of promoting equilibria that favor non-banks over those that favor banks. Furthermore, by modeling a commercial bank-based monetary system as an efficient solution to a payments problem this paper develops a theoretic framework that may be used to evaluate central bank digital currency proposals.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 12, 2020
Online Publication Date May 5, 2020
Publication Date May 5, 2020
Deposit Date Feb 13, 2020
Publicly Available Date May 14, 2020
Journal Review of Economic Analysis
Print ISSN 1973-3909
Publisher Rimini Centre For Economic Analysis
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 12
Issue 1
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/5383831
Publisher URL https://openjournals.uwaterloo.ca/index.php/rofea/article/view/1771

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