Cryptocurrencies, Currency Competition, and the Impossible Trinity
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We analyze a two-country economy with complete markets, featuring two national currencies as well as a global (crypto)currency. If the global currency is used in both countries, the national nominal interest rates must be equal and the exchange rate between the national currencies is a risk-adjusted martingale. Deviation from interest rate equality implies the risk of approaching the zero lower bound or the abandonment of the national currency. We call this result Crypto-Enforced Monetary Policy Synchronization (CEMPS). If the global currency is backed by interest-bearing assets, additional and tight restrictions on monetary policy arise. Thus, the classic Impossible Trinity becomes even less reconcilable.
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Copy CitationPierpaolo Benigno, Linda M. Schilling, and Harald Uhlig, NBER International Seminar on Macroeconomics 2021 (Journal of International Economics, volume 136, May 2022, 2021), chap. 2, https://www.nber.org/books-and-chapters/nber-international-seminar-macroeconomics-2021/cryptocurrencies-currency-competition-and-impossible-trinity.