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A Global Update on Cash Demand in Turbulent Times: Part I

Categories : Cash and Crises, Cash is trust
July 7, 2022
Tags : Cash and Crises, Cash demand, CBDC, Central Banks
Following exceptional growth in 2020, cash demand has returned to 'normal' growth in 2021. Looking forward, the rapidly rising interest will increase the opportunity cost of holding cash, while geopolitical tensions will increase the precautionary motive to keep cash.
Antti Heinonen

Chair of the Banknote Ethics Initiative; Member of the CashEssentials Steering Committee ; Former Director, Banknotes of the European Central Bank

This post is also available in: Spanish

This article was first published in Currency News in June 2022. It is republished here with the permission of the author.

Currency News has published annual updates on banknote developments at the global level since September 2017. Because of the exceptional situation created by the Covid-19 pandemic, being simultaneously mirrored in the decreasing transactional and increasing precautionary demand for cash, the update was published last year in two parts. The first part focused on the development of banknote circulation in value terms in 2020, comparing it with the past and the second part, when more information was available also on the denominational demand, shed further light on the store of value function of cash during the pandemic.

The hope that this year’s update would illustrate some kind of return to a new normal in cash demand has shown to be unrealistic. Not only have the lockdowns during the pandemic disrupted global supply chains, but the shocking Russian invasion of Ukraine has recently created further uncertainty. Even if the war has hit hardest the Ukrainian people and infrastructure, its impacts have been felt across the world, besides creating a strong reaction, it has brought about galloping inflation of food and energy prices.

All this means that in order for this annual update to illuminate also the more recent events, it will be again this year divided into two parts. The current first part will consider the development of banknote circulation in value terms in 2021 and address in particular, what did happen to the higher-than-normal cash balances accumulated during 2020. In addition, the effects of the cash paradox referred above, will be shortly considered. The second part will be published in September when more extensive information is available also in volume terms, and the impacts on cash demand caused by the growing inflation and the geopolitical tensions created by the Russian attack can be assessed. The second part will further elaborate on the potential consequences of recent developments for the future of cash.

Banknote Circulation in Value Terms in 2021

When addressing banknote demand globally, the most widely publicly available information is the value of banknotes in circulation. Besides “banknotes in circulation”, the only available figure in some cases is “cash in circulation”, i.e. the figure includes also coins, which are generally just a few percentages of the total cash in circulation, or “currency outside banks”. The latter figure excludes the banks´ vault cash. After central banks have introduced negative interest rates, the banks´ vault cash has increased exponentially in the case of some currencies. So not including it would give a wrong impression of the changes in the demand for banknotes, particularly when the growing inflation has recently begun to have an impact on the level of interest rates. However, only very few central banks have introduced negative interest rates, and these central banks typically publish the banknotes in circulation figures. Therefore, using slightly differing concepts will have only a minor, if any, impact on the results of this study.

Using statistics and various publications available on central bank websites, a slightly varying number (between 139 and 143) of currencies have been included in the following three charts. The figures refer, in most cases, to the end of the year (in some cases, the financial year is not the calendar year, and the statistics may refer to the end of the financial year). Furthermore, a small number of central banks haven’t yet updated their statistics with figures referring to the end of 2021; therefore, in half a dozen cases, annual growth figures referring to the end of an earlier month in 2021 have been used.

Let us look first at the annual growth rates by the value of banknotes in circulation in 2021, as described in Graph 1.

Graph 1. Annual growth rate by value of banknotes in circulation of 140 currencies in 2021.

Those readers who have followed earlier global updates will notice that the shape of the distribution of currencies between various brackets of growth rates describes clearly a return back towards a normal last year. It resembles a normal distribution and is remarkably centered, with more than 70% of the currencies having an annual growth rate between 0% and 15%. There is an unexpectedly small number of outliers at the lower end of the distribution in view of the record growth rates in 2020. So at least towards the end of 2021, the higher-than-normal cash balances accumulated during the pandemic hadn’t been consumed or abandoned globally. At the higher end of the distribution, the currencies showing growth rates of more than 25 % are in most cases suffering from high inflation.

The general impression conveyed by Graph 1 is confirmed by Graph 2, in which the growth rate in 2021 is compared with those in 2020 and 2019, the latter being the last “normal” year before the pandemic.

Graph 2. Annual growth rates by value of banknotes in circulation in 2019, 2020 and 2021.

The distributions in 2019 and 2021 are surprisingly similar; that of 2020 instead is squeezed to the right towards the higher growth rates. The exceptionality of 2020 can be further highlighted by considering the median annual growth rates by the value of banknotes in circulation during the last ten years. They are depicted in Graph 3.

Graph 3. Median annual growth rates by value of banknotes in circulation, 2011-2021.

The trend of the median annual growth rate has been slightly decreasing with small ups and downs; however, the growth rates have been globally higher than those of the nominal GDP. The year 2020 makes a striking exception in the development, which is explained by the fact that 42 % of the 142 currencies had in 2020 their highest annual growth rate of the value of banknotes in circulation during the last ten years. It is remarkable that even after such an exceptional year, the median annual growth rate of the value of banknotes in circulation did not fall close to zero or reach even a negative figure but kept the level it had before the pandemic.

Provisional Conclusions

Even if the 2021 figures depicted above refer to a return to normality, the situation has been upset by the recent events. Therefore, it is too early to anticipate what will happen to the banknote demand in 2022 or in the medium term. On the one hand, the rapidly climbing interest rates will increase the opportunity cost of holding savings in cash. On the other hand, the uncertainty created by the geopolitical tensions will increase the precautionary motive to keep cash balances.

Declining Transactional Demand

Seemingly independently from the growing precautionary demand for banknotes the long-term trend of the share of cash in transactions is generally decreasing. This divergence in the development of using cash for payments and saving purposes, respectively might not be an issue, if cash would still be the dominant means of payment in a certain country or region. However, in a situation where cash is on the way to becoming a marginal payment instrument, this development raises the question, what does it mean for the maintenance of the cash infrastructure and the role of public money? To several central banks facing this question the answer seems to be the central bank digital currency (CBDC).

According to the most recent BIS survey, nine out of 10 central banks in the survey are exploring CBDCs, and more than half are now developing them or running concrete experiments. Furthermore, more than two-thirds of central banks consider that they will likely or possibly issue a retail CBDC in the short or medium term.

Evidently, there are other reasons for central banks to develop CBDCs than just the diminishing role of cash in payments. The development work may be related to the improvement of the existing payment infrastructure, or the technological development of a CBDC is found useful per se in this world of growing threats of cyberattacks.

Even if the technological issues related to CBDCs seem to be solvable, the most important questions in their successful launch relate to two behavioural questions. Why would citizens start to use digital currencies issued by a central bank if they are satisfied with their current digital payment media issued by the private sector? What is the business case for the banking sector in case a central bank would like to delegate the intermediation of a CBDC to banks? Considering the uncertainty surrounding these behavioural questions, the central banks would benefit from a Plan B in their forward-looking development work.

Trust in Cash

The trust in physical cash has been evidenced during the Covid-19 pandemic and in the earlier crises.[1] Cash is under one’s control and not dependent upon the working of other systems. It is something tangible, which is a critical characteristic under uncertainty. The strong public opposition against the CBDC raised in some central bank surveys can indeed result from the perception and worry of the citizens that it will displace cash.[2] There is no other public good currently or in the foreseeable future that has or will provide similar properties, which highlights the role of cash as public infrastructure. Therefore, a well-functioning cash infrastructure is Plan B for those central banks that are developing CBDCs because of the diminishing role of physical cash in payments. That does not mean only the maintenance of the current infrastructure but also the development of innovative solutions needed in the changing environment. This kind of Plan B is a prerequisite for the availability and usability of cash in a crisis. The central banks have, in this respect, excellent reasons to advocate the continued general acceptance of cash.

[1]  Gerhard Rösl, Franz Seitz. “Cash demand in times of crises,” Weidener Diskussionspapiere Nr. 83, November 2021.

[2] See  Reserve Bank of New Zealand, Future of Money –Te Moni Anamata: Summary of responses to our 2021 issues papers, April 2022.

 

 

This post is also available in: Spanish

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