A recent working paper from the International Monetary Fund outlines how dollar-based stablecoins might provoke more synchronized and accelerated currency runs, especially in regions maintaining overvalued fixed exchange rate systems. The study delves into how these digital currencies could make it easier for households in these economies to move their funds swiftly once they detect threats to the stability of local currency pegs.
What Role Do Stablecoins Play in Currency Markets?
Stablecoins present an alternative in nations where government-imposed exchange rates do not align with true market values, often limiting access to foreign currency. In response, individuals look to parallel markets where varied and unclear pricing can cloud the true value of foreign currency. Dollar-pegged stablecoins provide a straightforward and public benchmark for currency value, potentially more reliable than disparate rates from unofficial sources.
This clarity, while beneficial in risk management, could also set the stage for abrupt shifts away from local currencies. When citizens receive clear, immediate pricing signals about potential risks to currency pegs, mass fund movement may become a coordinated effort rather than isolated incidents.
Stablecoins generate a state-dependent welfare effect. They expand access to foreign currency and can improve allocation by making beliefs about misalignment more informative, but the same public price can also coordinate runs by making beliefs and actions more synchronized.
An illustrative case is Bolivia. Following a regulatory relaxation in mid-2024 concerning digital asset transactions, the country saw a twelvefold increase in these dealings. Consequently, the USDT became the predominant measure for parallel dollar exchange rates, prompting Bolivia’s central bank to document it formally.
Welfare Dynamics: Are There Hidden Costs?
According to Brandon Joel Tan’s simulations, increased transparency associated with stablecoins tends to heighten financial crisis exposure. Comparisons among different economic models show that the risk of crisis escalates significantly in environments where stablecoins act as a public pricing authority. For instance, in cash-only systems, average exposure stands at 3.9%, whereas the inclusion of stablecoins with public pricing surges it to 7.4%.
- Stablecoin presence linked to higher crisis exposure.
- Welfare benefits under stable conditions but not during misalignment.
- Risk management needs to adapt when currency pegs are under threat.
Brandon Joel Tan urges against outright bans on stablecoins since such restrictions could disadvantage unbanked populations by removing their low-cost access to dollars. Instead, he suggests a balanced approach that allows stablecoin usage during stable periods but enables regulators to implement specific controls when exchange rate misalignments become severe.
The model suggests a state-contingent approach: preserve low-cost access in normal conditions, but introduce temporary, targeted restrictions on large flows during periods of high misalignment.
Although the paper represents individual research rather than the formal stance of the IMF, the insights provided are set to play a pivotal role in shaping future policy discussions related to stablecoins and their regulation in financially sensitive regions.



