This paper explores how central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) in emerging markets have economic consequences, and it will address how these currencies affect financial inclusion, banking stability, and economic growth. Through the methods of quantitative analysis, descriptive statistics, correlation matrices, model fit testing, and regression modeling, the study assesses whether CBDCs will be a financial development driver or dangerous to financial systems. The findings demonstrate that the adoption of CBDC has strong positive effects on financial inclusion, with adopters having the inclusion rate almost four-percentage points higher than non-adopters. But the results also indicate that CBDCs are negatively correlated with banking stability, which can imply a risk of displacing deposits and undermining the role of intermediation in conventional banks. In comparison, the impact of CBDCs on GDP growth is relatively small, which implies that though CBDCs do not seem to promote short-term macroeconomic growth, they facilitate the creation of digital infrastructure that can benefit efficiency in the long run. This paper summarizes that CBDCs are both an opportunity and a threat to new economies. They have the potential to increase the availability of finance and make payment systems more modern but need to be designed carefully so as not to destabilize banking sectors. Practical implications stress the importance of gradual implementations, effective regulatory communities, and powerful digital systems. Restrictions and future study suggestions are addressed, with special emphasis on the need of contextual and longitudinal analysis.
Khan et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
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