NBER | Using Models to Reveal How the Expansion of the Digital Economy is Reshaping the Global Financial Landscape
Research findings indicate that, in the long term, the reserve demand effect outweighs the substitution effect, resulting in lower U.S. interest rates and an increase in U.S. external borrowing.
Author: Marina Azzimonti and Vincenzo Quadrini
Source: NBER
Translation: Li Yujia
I. Introduction
This paper focuses on the impact of digital economic development on the central position of U.S. debt in global financial markets and the role of stablecoins. U.S. government debt maintains low interest rates for dollar-denominated assets due to its liquidity, convenient services, and value storage functions. Stablecoins, as a special type of cryptocurrency, are pegged to the U.S. dollar or reserve currencies and have relatively stable value. Although their current market size is smaller than that of U.S. Treasury bonds, it is expected to grow significantly in the future, potentially changing the holding patterns of dollar-denominated assets and U.S. government debt.
II. Literature Review
There has been considerable research on cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, and related fields. The value of cryptocurrencies often stems from their use as a medium of exchange, while stablecoins, as safe assets, highlight their value storage function. Related research covers comparisons with traditional tools, arbitrage dynamics, speculation risks, and also involves the impact of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) and digital economy-related models, including multi-country models analyzing the impact of stablecoins on monetary policy. This paper focuses on the transitional and long-term effects of the digital economy as a provider of digital services and new savings tools, viewing its expansion as a potential mechanism to alleviate the global shortage of safe assets, thus contributing to the relevant literature.
III. Overview of the Digital Economy
3.1 Blockchain and Digital Production Foundation of the digital economy and blockchain: The operation of the digital economy is based on blockchain technology, which is a decentralized public ledger where nodes compete to validate transaction blocks and receive rewards. Common protocols include PoW and PoS. Bitcoin and Ethereum are well-known blockchains. Figure 2 shows Ethereum user transaction fees and ETH supply, reflecting information such as digital production and cryptocurrency market value.



IV. Model
The model includes three countries/regions: the United States (US), the rest of the world (RoW), and the digital economy (DiEco). The paper treats the digital economy as a unique economy with its own currency. However, the digital economy is defined not by geographic boundaries, but by the technological platform—blockchain—on which it operates.
4.1 Digital Economy There are a continuum of agents in the digital economy who maximize expected lifetime consumption utility:





4.2 Non-digital Economy
Non-digital economy agents and production
Agents in the U.S. and the rest of the world (RoW) have the same preferences as digital economy agents, seeking to maximize expected lifetime utility:
Production uses a fixed supply of non-renewable land, and agents produce D or N goods depending on idiosyncratic productivity shocks. Since technology is the same, the relative price of the two goods is 1, but the price of D goods in the digital economy may be lower. The difference between the U.S. and RoW lies in volatility; RoW agents face higher volatility, resulting in lower U.S. net foreign asset positions, consistent with data, and the distribution in RoW is more dispersed (Assumption 3.1).
Agent types and financial markets
Agents are divided into habitual (familiar with the digital economy, considering buying its D goods and stablecoins) and non-habitual (unfamiliar, do not hold them). Their status evolves over time with certain probabilities, affecting the demand for D goods and stablecoins.
In financial markets, the U.S. and RoW governments issue bonds. Agents can hold domestic and foreign bonds as well as stablecoins. Holding foreign bonds incurs costs (Assumption 3.2), but stablecoins, due to the characteristics of the digital economy, do not have this cost. The budget constraint varies by agent type, with the habitual type's constraint given by:
Non-habitual agents do not hold stablecoins, and their optimal policy is determined by Lemma 3.2, involving the allocation of savings between land and bonds and comparing returns on different assets.
Equilibrium properties without the digital economy
Without the digital economy, since the only difference between the U.S. and the rest of the world is the volatility of idiosyncratic shocks,the steady state of the integrated economy has the following properties:
4.3 Fully Integrated World Economy
Now consider a fully integrated economy, where habitual agents in the U.S. and RoW can hold stablecoins issued by the digital economy (DiEco), and digital economy agents can hold bonds issued by the U.S. and RoW. The following proposition describes some steady-state properties.
V. Quantitative Analysis
This section focuses on quantifying the impact of digital economy growth on financial markets, with its expansion driven by the familiarity of traditional economy agents with digital activities (the share of habitual agents). The increase affects the economy through two channels: "financial demand" and "real demand," which will be separately analyzed through counterfactual simulations.
5.1 Calibration The paper calibrates initial values and steady-state targets using 2023 cryptocurrency market capitalization and other data. It further calibrates parameters related to productivity and cryptocurrency value to match six moments, including U.S. bond yields and net foreign asset positions. The parameters work together to achieve model calibration, with Table 1 presenting the complete set of calibration parameters.
5.2 Transition Dynamics Equilibrium
Figure8 shows the transition dynamics of four key variables. The share of habitual agents evolves exogenously, rising from an initial0.4% to a long-term10%, driving the model's transition dynamics. The price of D goods in the digital economy is initially much lower than in the non-digital economy due to limited early demand, but as the share of habitual agents increases, demand and prices rise. The value added by the digital economy as a share of global output rises from0.2% to about1.1%. The price-earnings ratio of cryptocurrencies is initially over100, driven by expectations of future growth, but falls to about20 as the industry matures, similar to valuation changes in emerging industries.
Figure 9 shows the transition dynamics of other variables. U.S. interest rates are affected by two opposing forces, resulting in a non-monotonic path—first rising, then falling. As the share of habitual agents increases, more agents in the rest of the world shift to holding stablecoins, putting downward pressure on U.S. interest rates; at the same time, higher D goods prices and cryptocurrency values increase the wealth of digital economy agents, leading to more stablecoin issuance and upward pressure on interest rates. Stablecoin issuance increases under both forces, with supply-side effects dominating early on and a low dollar reserve ratio, while the ratio rises later, strengthening demand for U.S. Treasuries.


VI. Conclusions and Recommendations
The U.S. dollar, by virtue of its stability, occupies a central position in international finance. This paper finds that the growth of the digital economy (especially stablecoins) affects global finance through two channels. The first channel is the increased demand for stablecoins. Since stablecoins are partly backed by dollar-denominated assets, this leads to lower U.S. interest rates and exacerbates global imbalances. The second channel is the increased supply of stablecoins backed by non-dollar assets. This raises U.S. interest rates and reduces global imbalances. Model simulations show that, in the long run, the first channel dominates the second, resulting in lower U.S. interest rates. This also means that the U.S.'s net external borrowing will continue to increase. At the same time, the paper finds that the expansion of the digital economy will increase the supply of stablecoins, helping some agents smooth consumption. Agents in the rest of the world who are familiar with the digital economy benefit more, but this comes at the cost of increased consumption volatility for U.S. and digital economy agents. Globally, the digital economy improves welfare by providing cheap services and insurance, but welfare is distributed asymmetrically across countries and agents, making the exploration of its welfare effects a direction for future research.Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
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