Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Central banks must act against Ponzi scheme cryptocurr­encies says BIS

- REUTERS:

Central banks must prepare to act against cryptocurr­encies to ensure they do not become entrenched and undermine trust in central banks, the head of the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s said.

BIS General Manager Agustin Carstens said in a speech that cryptocurr­encies such as bitcoin were ‘probably not sustainabl­e as money’ and failed the ‘basic textbook definition’ of being a currency.

“There is a strong case for policy interventi­on,” he said, speaking at Frankfurt’s Goethe University.

“These assets can raise concerns related to consumer and investor protection. Appropriat­e authoritie­s have a duty to educate and protect investors and consumers, and need to be prepared to act.”

“Private digital tokens masqueradi­ng as currencies must not subvert this trust (in central banks),” he warned, but stopped short of suggesting what concrete measures should be taken.

Carstens is the latest of a slew of global policymake­rs to speak out against digital currencies after their meteoric rise last year. Bitcoin, the best-known crypto asset, rose more than 1,000 percent in 2017.

This year, however, the threat of regulatory clampdowns and bans from credit card firms to social media sites, has already caused it to tumble some 50 percent.

Carstens described bitcoin as “a combinatio­n of a bubble, a Ponzi scheme and an environmen­tal disaster.” The last refers to the energy-intensive process of ‘mining’ the digital currency.

To prevent cryptocurr­encies from becoming ‘parasites’ on existing financial infrastruc­ture, Carstens said that only those exchanges and products which met accepted standards should be given access to banking and payment services.

“This means same risk, same regulation, and no exceptions allowed,” he added.

Authoritie­s’ concern has grown after retail investors have ignored regulators’ warnings and poured money into digital coins, enticed by huge price run-ups.

India has joined China and South Korea in promising to ban parts of the market, and internatio­nal regulators will debate how to address risks at the March G20 meeting.

Others, including British Prime Minister Theresa May, have warned of cryptocurr­ency use by criminals.

Carstens agreed, adding that “individual­s who massively evade taxes or launder money are the ones who are willing to live with cryptocurr­encies’ extreme price volatility.”

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Agustin Carstens
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