Trust Bridges and Money Flows: A Digital Marketplace to Improve Cross-Border Payments

This paper studies how trust networks evolve once money becomes digital—that is, expressed on ledgers commonly available to market participants, such as for stablecoins, tokenized commercial bank deposits, or central bank digital currencies.
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Volume/Issue: Volume 2023 Issue 001
Publication date: March 2023
ISBN: 9798400227073
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Topics covered in this book

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Banks and Banking , Finance , Economics- Macroeconomics , Money and Monetary Policy , Economics / General , cross-border payments , cross-border payment , tokenized money , liquidity swap lines , money flow , Tokenized money , issuers of money , marketplace model , trust relationship , Currencies , Digital currencies , Currency markets , Correspondent banking , Global

Summary

Cross-border payments are expensive, slow, and opaque. These problems reflect multiple frictions, many of which boil down to limited trust among counterparties. Trust plays a central role in exchanging credit-based money. End users need to trust the issuers of money, and issuers must trust users to satisfy financial integrity requirements. Transactions are possible only where trust links exist. Interoperability between different forms of money can thus be conceptualized as the network of trusted links necessary for transactions. Traditionally, across borders, trust links involve exclusive bilateral credit relationships among correspondent banks. However, the fixed costs required to build these links foster an expensive and concentrated system. This paper interprets different payment arrangements in terms of the implied trust structures. It discusses how the tokenization of money alters trust links and allows for a potentially more efficient market structure to exchange money. The paper ends with a suggested global marketplace to trade tokenized money directly across borders.