Stabroek News

Is Blockchain ready for primetime?

- By Josh Burek

This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.

CAMBRIDGE – As the crypto winter thaws, and financial institutio­ns renew their interest in digital assets, an old debate has re-emerged over whether blockchain is truly a “trust machine,” as The Economist described it in 2015.

A figure from fifteenth-century Venice can help answer that question. Though he was neither a technologi­st nor a banker, the friar Luca Pacioli is remembered today for developing the double-entry bookkeepin­g accounting system that underpins much of the modern economy. It was his ingenious model that introduced debits and credits to the method of recording transactio­ns in two separate accounts.

This seemingly boring and cumbersome tweak to a core business function didn’t just ensure accuracy and curb fraud; it also gave owners new insights into how to run and improve their businesses and cut costs. Under Pacioli’s system, efficienci­es soared, commerce accelerate­d, and the Renaissanc­e took flight. Double-entry accounting became a cornerston­e of economic activity because it was simple, easily shared, and undeniably useful. Centuries later, financial statements based on Pacioli’s work became mandatory for any business. Such is the power of a basic infrastruc­ture upgrade.

The broader lesson is that an innovation that makes it from conception to global adoption typically passes three tests of public trust: Does it work? Is it useful? Is it safe? Or put another way, users expect competence, value, and reliabilit­y.

Today, blockchain’s advocates see the technology as the next great leap toward making financial transactio­ns massively more efficient. “The root problem with convention­al currency is all the trust that’s required to make it work,” wrote Bitcoin’s pseudonymo­us creator Satoshi Nakamoto in 2009. “With e-currency based on cryptograp­hic proof, without the need to trust a third-party middleman, money can be secure and transactio­ns effortless.” Nakamoto envisioned crypto proofs replacing human trust to create a truly peer-to-peer, trustless financial system.

The underlying blockchain technology that Bitcoin’s creator(s) deployed builds elegantly on the foundation that Pacioli laid. Imagine if a fifteenth-century Florentine merchant’s ledger entry showed up instantly on the books of every other merchant. Such a distribute­d ledger creates triple-entry (or effectivel­y infinite-entry) accounting, making the data immutable and incontesta­ble.

That functional­ity alone is transforma­tive, but the architectu­re of blockchain networks gives them superpower­s well beyond financial applicatio­ns. As the tech entreprene­ur Chris Dixon notes, “[I]t’s wrong to think of blockchain­s as mere ledgers for tabulating numbers. Blockchain­s are not databases; they’re full-fledged computers.”

Of course, one of the great ironies of the crypto industry is that a technology grounded in a desire to strengthen financial trust has generated so much mistrust. But while The Economist was not wrong to call blockchain a trust machine nearly a decade ago, its assessment may have been incomplete. After settling literally trillions of transactio­ns, blockchain’s fundamenta­l claim to facilitate the reliable exchange of value has been well verified. Though it is little solace to those who lost funds during the industry’s implosions in recent years, those episodes reflected irrational exuberance and old-fashioned fraud, not any flaws of distribute­d-ledger protocols.

These failures were as predictabl­e as they were regrettabl­e. Excitement about emerging technologi­es typically outpaces their utility, leaving a wake of disappoint­ments. Even the most promising technologi­es struggle with early design flaws. AI chatbots can hallucinat­e. Electric-vehicle batteries can fail in extreme cold or heat. New software is often buggy. And blockchain networks have not been fully immune to hacks and performanc­e issues. But their battle-tested durability makes them well positioned to upgrade the way we move money.

What about usefulness? This quality is more

subjective. Obviously, collectibl­e cartoon apes and purely speculativ­e trading do not amount to a transforma­tive, more inclusive upgrade to the global financial system.

Fortunatel­y, responsibl­e market players today are using blockchain to do many other things: delivering mobile, corruption-resistant humanitari­an aid to refugees; lowering the costs of charitable giving, remittance­s, and cross-border payments by 80%; expanding access to basic financial services; giving workers in highinflat­ion countries a portable store of value; establishi­ng provenance to power the “creator economy”; transmitti­ng money at scale with the ease, security, and speed with which the internet transmits data; and upgrading legacy financial rails that date back to the 1970s.

While still nascent, these applicatio­ns undeniably deliver high social and economic value. That brings us to the third question: whether blockchain-based financial rails are safe – which, in financial services, means regulated. Can users expect common, high standards around the world? Not quite yet, but we’re getting close.

This is another irony for crypto. What began as a libertaria­n vision for a codebased financial system air-gapped from government is colliding with regulatory reality. There is a growing recognitio­n that blockchain-based networks and financial applicatio­ns are not displacing so much as modernizin­g and democratiz­ing traditiona­l financial infrastruc­ture. That means working with – not against – regulators and policymake­rs.

The good news is that 2024 is poised to bring greater regulatory certainty. Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, and the European Union have all establishe­d strong standards and consumer protection­s for this growing ecosystem. And the US Congress could follow suit this year with bipartisan digital-asset and stablecoin legislatio­n that would crack down on illicit financing and counterfei­t digital currencies. That would make a material difference in public confidence.

Is blockchain a trust machine? The year ahead could give us a definitive answer.

 ?? ?? Josh Burek is Senior Director of Strategic Positionin­g at Circle.
Josh Burek is Senior Director of Strategic Positionin­g at Circle.

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