The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Bitcoin’s government enemies are planning their revenge

- By LIONEL LAURENT

CHINA loves the blockchain, and the blockchain loves it back. Despite the People’s Republic having the least free Internet in the world, and a ban on cryptocurr­ency trading, the Communist Party’s endorsemen­t of the technology last month sent bitcoin prices soaring almost 30% in a few days.

The irony is striking, considerin­g Bitcoin’s anarchic origins. But there’s something broader going on here. The future of digital money is being shaped increasing­ly by national government­s. Politician­s are under pressure to make electronic payments more efficient, to neutralise the threat of cryptocurr­encies to their sovereignt­y and to crack down on illicit money flows. None of that is good news for the blockchain’s true believers, however much a Beijing stamp of approval boosts the price of a Bitcoin.

States dabbling in blockchain technology, or planning to issue their own digital currencies, isn’t flattery – it’s competitio­n. Some 70% of central banks surveyed by the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s are examining their options in this area. In places like Sweden, rapidly going cashless, electronic “fiat” money is seen as a path to easier payments. If that works out, stateless crypto coins would lose one of their selling points.

The first central bank digital currency could be here within five years, according to Internatio­nal Business Machines Corp. It may be sooner given the political pressure and the financial Cold War between the US and China. President Donald Trump has made clear that Facebook Inc’s Libra will only get off the ground if it helps the US dollar. Beijing is betting that its own digital currency efforts will help it resist American power. The eurozone thinks similar.

So we can assume more competitio­n for the “legacy” cryptocurr­encies from state actors. But what about the “crypto” (secret) part of digital money that attracts people? If e-dollars or e-yuan are centrally controlled and monitored (which they most certainly will be), surely that will compel privacy-craving users to stick with bitcoin and its ilk.

Politician­s are looking to destroy this competitiv­e advantage for nonstate digital currencies by making them less secure. Government­s are investing heavily in a technology that could one day – in theory – crack the public-key cryptograp­hy underpinni­ng bitcoin: Quantum computing. The Trump administra­tion has committed Us$1.2bil to this endeavor. China is active too.

Google Inc’s recent declaratio­n of “quantum supremacy” doesn’t mean the tech is ready for this task; the author Olivier Ezratty notes that the kind of algorithm needed to crack Bitcoin encryption would demand much more power. But that may be available within a decade.

Already simpler tools are shining a light on cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns by organised crime. Last month blockchain analysis helped US and Korean authoritie­s bring down one of the world’s largest markets for child pornograph­y.

Crypto believers hate the idea of losing the cloak of privacy to prying government eyes. But will the general public feel the same? People are happy when states shine a light on the parts of the financial system that allow money laundering and tax-dodging. And if dollars or euros become digital assets issued by central banks, they might look more like the future of money than the power-sucking mining rigs that dominate bitcoin.

In praising the blockchain, government­s are out to bury the cryptocurr­encies that gave birth to it. “Innovation in blockchain technology does not mean we should speculate in virtual currencies,” the People’s Daily newspaper wrote. Bitcoin fans take note.

Lionel Laurent is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering Brussels. He previously worked at Reuters and Forbes. The views expressed here are solely the writer’s own.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia