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Historical Reflections on the Transition between Money Technologies Professor Catherine R. Schenk University of Oxford Uses of the Past in International Economic Relations www.UPIER.web.ox.ac.uk

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  • Historical Reflections on the Transition between Money

    Technologies Professor Catherine R. Schenk

    University of Oxford

    Uses of the Past in International EconomicRelations

    www.UPIER.web.ox.ac.uk

  • The Long History of the Future of Fintech• Money

    • Means of Exchange (settlement systems)• Store of Value (assets)• Unit of Account (denomination of transactions, valuation)

    • Incentives for Technological innovation• Efficiency (gold to notes)• Network externalities• Monopoly rents/Seigniorage• Fee generation/commercial interests

    • Environment for transitions• ICT innovations (telegraph to TCP/IP)• Inflation (destroys fiat money)• Political disruption/War - legal tender for tax purposes

  • What is Money

    Means of Exchange Store of Value Unit of Account

    Notes and CoinFinTech:

    Card PaymentsMobile Payments etc

    National CurrencyGlobal Currency?Gold (safe haven)

    Crypto-currencies: speculative, unstable value, limited means of exchangeEnvironmentally damaging to mine

  • Grasberg mine Indonesia(13,000 feet deep)

    Hut 8 Medicine Hat Canada: uses as much electricity each day as entire cityMost is fossil fuels (CBC.ca)

    Sebastião Salgado, SERRA PELADA, GOLD MINE, BRAZIL, 1986

    Bitcoin mining is not directly extractive – also providing settlement system

  • International Currencies Transitions• Sterling until 1950s, then USD

    Loss of stable value, shrinking share of UK in world trade, transition delayed by institutional controls, fragility of the USD until 1970s floating era

    • USD remarkably stable share of global reserves, dominant in means of exchange, unit of account and settlement

    • 2008: China and Frankel ‘Why the Euro will rival the dollar’, International Finance.

    • 2010: RMB Internationalisation

  • Currency Distribution of Foreign Exchange Reserves 1950-1982(SDR Valuation)

    0.0

    10.0

    20.0

    30.0

    40.0

    50.0

    60.0

    70.0

    80.0

    90.0

    1950

    1952

    1954

    1956

    1958

    1960

    1962

    1964

    1966

    1968

    1970

    1972

    1974

    1976

    1978

    1980

    1982

    Perc

    ent Sterling

    US$Other

    1955 1970

  • International Currencies Transitions• Sterling until 1950s, then USD

    Loss of stable value, shrinking share of UK in world trade, transition delayed by institutional controls, fragility of the USD until 1970s floating era

    • USD remarkably resilient share of global reserves, dominant in means of exchange, unit of account and settlement

    • 2008: China and Frankel ‘Why the Euro will rival the dollar’, International Finance.

    • 2010: RMB Internationalisation

  • 50

    60

    70

    80

    90

    100

    110

    120

    130

    140

    01-1

    994

    07-1

    994

    01-1

    995

    07-1

    995

    01-1

    996

    07-1

    996

    01-1

    997

    07-1

    997

    01-1

    998

    07-1

    998

    01-1

    999

    07-1

    999

    01-2

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    07-2

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    01-2

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    011

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    015

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    016

    07-2

    016

    01-2

    017

    07-2

    017

    01-2

    018

    07-2

    018

    US Dollar Broad Effective Exchange Rate Index (2010 = 100)

    March 2002

    July 2008

    Emerging Market Economy Crises 1990s

    Great Moderation

    Quantitative Easing November 2008- October 2014

    End of Quantitative Easing October 2014-

  • BIS Quarterly Review | September 2018 | 23 September 2018

  • International Currencies Transitions• Sterling until 1950s, then USD

    Loss of stable value, shrinking share of UK in world trade, transition delayed by institutional controls, fragility of the USD until 1970s floating era

    • USD remarkably stable share of global reserves, dominant in means of exchange, unit of account and settlement

    • 2008: China and Frankel ‘Why the Euro will rival the dollar’, International Finance.

    • 2010: RMB Internationalisation• Trade settlement• Accumulations for speculative purposes• August 2015: downward price risk, new exchange controls

  • Customer initiated and institutional payments. Messages exchanged on SWIFT. Based on value.

  • Supranational Currency• IMF Special Drawing Right (SDR) 20 years to develop and refine (1961-

    81)• Triumph of compromise over clarity: 1967

    • Ambiguity about purpose: • Replace or supplement USD as a reserve asset?• Form of credit or reserve asset?• NOT an international money: unit of account, not store of value or means of exchange

    • Efforts to develop Market SDR• 1980s denomination of oil trade (geopolitical obstacles, but also liquidity)• SDR denominated bonds• SDR – diversification easily replicated• Few advantages over dollar or diversified currency portfolio

    • Enthusiasm tends to increase with dollar volatility/depreciation and recede with appreciation (only 3% global reserves)

  • The Long History of the Future of FinTech• Accounting systems: long distance trade (trust, security, stable value)• 12thC -17thC: Promissory notes, letters of credit, Bills of Exchange

    (negotiable)• Correspondent Banking: enhanced by Telegraph from 1851 Dover-

    Calais/1866 Transatlantic (underwater cable still used)• 1973 SWIFT: Electronic cross-border message system to allow

    settlement: secure correspondent banking - first message 1977• 2012 – Ripple/XCurrent (Blockchain wth Santander 2018)

    • 1980s: Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) – large value transfer systems between banks and central banks

    1986 Big Bang – 1987 Stock Market crash

  • Cashless Society?• Originates in late 1950s, prevalent in 1980s (Batiz-Lazo et al 2014)

    • Highly anticipated: 60 years to arrive?• Card Payments: Credit to Current payments

    • 1958: Bankamerica and American Express• 1965: Bankamerica licenses other banks

    • Mobile payments: still linked to banks• Central Bank Digital Currency (additional liquidity)

    • Need to balance additionality against risks (BIS March 2018)

    • Requires secure protocols

  • 0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    6

    7

    8

    9

    30 Ju

    n 82

    31 Ja

    n 83

    31 A

    ug 8

    331

    Mar

    84

    31 O

    ct 8

    431

    May

    85

    31 D

    ec 8

    531

    Jul 8

    628

    Feb

    87

    30 S

    ep 8

    730

    Apr

    88

    30 N

    ov 8

    830

    Jun

    8931

    Jan

    9031

    Aug

    90

    31 M

    ar 9

    131

    Oct

    91

    31 M

    ay 9

    231

    Dec

    92

    31 Ju

    l 93

    28 F

    eb 9

    430

    Sep

    94

    30 A

    pr 9

    530

    Nov

    95

    30 Ju

    n 96

    31 Ja

    n 97

    31 A

    ug 9

    731

    Mar

    98

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    ct 9

    831

    May

    99

    31 D

    ec 9

    931

    Jul 0

    028

    Feb

    01

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    ep 0

    130

    Apr

    02

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    ov 0

    230

    Jun

    0331

    Jan

    0431

    Aug

    04

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    ar 0

    531

    Oct

    05

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    ay 0

    631

    Dec

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    l 07

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    eb 0

    830

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    08

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    pr 0

    930

    Nov

    09

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    n 10

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    n 11

    31 A

    ug 1

    131

    Mar

    12

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    ct 1

    231

    May

    13

    31 D

    ec 1

    331

    Jul 1

    428

    Feb

    15

    30 S

    ep 1

    530

    Apr

    16

    30 N

    ov 1

    630

    Jun

    1731

    Jan

    1831

    Aug

    18

    Perc

    ent

    Notes and Coin as a Percentage of M4 1982-2018

  • 0%

    10%

    20%

    30%

    40%

    50%

    60%

    70%

    80%

    90%

    100%

    1959

    -01-

    0119

    60-0

    2-01

    1961

    -03-

    0119

    62-0

    4-01

    1963

    -05-

    0119

    64-0

    6-01

    1965

    -07-

    0119

    66-0

    8-01

    1967

    -09-

    0119

    68-1

    0-01

    1969

    -11-

    0119

    70-1

    2-01

    1972

    -01-

    0119

    73-0

    2-01

    1974

    -03-

    0119

    75-0

    4-01

    1976

    -05-

    0119

    77-0

    6-01

    1978

    -07-

    0119

    79-0

    8-01

    1980

    -09-

    0119

    81-1

    0-01

    1982

    -11-

    0119

    83-1

    2-01

    1985

    -01-

    0119

    86-0

    2-01

    1987

    -03-

    0119

    88-0

    4-01

    1989

    -05-

    0119

    90-0

    6-01

    1991

    -07-

    0119

    92-0

    8-01

    1993

    -09-

    0119

    94-1

    0-01

    1995

    -11-

    0119

    96-1

    2-01

    1998

    -01-

    0119

    99-0

    2-01

    2000

    -03-

    0120

    01-0

    4-01

    2002

    -05-

    0120

    03-0

    6-01

    2004

    -07-

    0120

    05-0

    8-01

    2006

    -09-

    0120

    07-1

    0-01

    2008

    -11-

    0120

    09-1

    2-01

    2011

    -01-

    0120

    12-0

    2-01

    2013

    -03-

    0120

    14-0

    4-01

    2015

    -05-

    0120

    16-0

    6-01

    2017

    -07-

    0120

    18-0

    8-01

    USA Components of M2 1959-2018

    Currency Checkable Deposits Demand Deposits Non-M1 Components of M2

  • Increase in Card Payments is not related to a decrease in Cash in Circulation(except in Sweden)

    Source: Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures BIS (2018)

  • Cashless Society• Originates in late 1950s, prevalent in 1980s (Batiz-Lazo et al 2014)

    • Highly anticipated: 60 years to arrive?• Card Payments: Credit to Current payments

    • 1958: Bankamerica and American Express• 1965: Bankamerica licenses other banks

    • Mobile payments: still linked to banks• Central Bank Digital Currency (additional liquidity)

    • Need to balance additionality against risks (BIS March 2018)• Requires secure protocols

  • RBS: ‘Mary’ 1968-1976

    1971

    1969

  • Switz 1991

    2007

    Hong Kong 2008Greece 2015

  • Cashless Society• Originates in late 1950s, prevalent in 1980s (Batiz-Lazo et al 2014)

    • Highly anticipated: 60 years to arrive?• Card Payments: Credit to Current payments

    • 1958: Bankamerica and American Express• 1965: Bankamerica licenses other banks

    • Mobile payments: still linked to banks (2007 Bank Run)• Central Bank Digital Currency (additional liquidity)

    • Need to balance additionality against risks (BIS March 2018)• Requires secure protocols

  • Conclusions: What might be different?• New money is difficult to introduce: need demand, stable value,

    liquidity• ICT technology cheaper and easier to access:

    • lower barriers to entry for start-ups• Competition vs externalities (less need for conformity?)• Quicker to tipping point for Network Externalities?

    • ICT also poses Risk and supervisory challenges• Bank of England bringing Fintech into its settlement systems, Payments Systems

    Regulator

    • Secure protocols, distributed ledgers, quantum computing?

    Historical Reflections on the Transition between Money Technologies The Long History of the Future of FintechWhat is MoneySlide Number 4International Currencies TransitionsSlide Number 6International Currencies TransitionsSlide Number 8Slide Number 9International Currencies TransitionsSlide Number 11Slide Number 12Slide Number 13Supranational CurrencyThe Long History of the Future of FinTechSlide Number 16Cashless Society?Slide Number 18Slide Number 19Slide Number 20Slide Number 21Cashless SocietySlide Number 23Slide Number 24Cashless SocietyConclusions: What might be different?