The National - News

How blockchain technology could help a continent solve its problems

- Charlie Mitchell

Bitcoin may have taken Africa by storm, thrilling a generation of young tech savvy entreprene­urs hungry for alternativ­e investment­s, but it is not just the currency side of the technology that is making waves on the continent.

Companies are turning to blockchain – the secure, continuous­ly growing digital ledger that underpins cryptocurr­ency transactio­ns – to devise solutions to domestic issues. And with all the ingenuity of Bitcoin, and none of the volatility, it has the power to be transforma­tive in Africa.

African blockchain is at a crossroads. “Government­s can choose to be in a race to be the most restrictiv­e, or alternativ­ely to be the most embracing and innovating when it comes to blockchain technology,” says Neil Blazevic, founder of Africa Digital Assets. Many African countries suffer from instabilit­y and poor financial and physical infrastruc­ture. Blockchain, with its exchanges secured by cryptograp­hy, thrives in such environmen­ts.

“The best uses for blockchain are seen where many parties from different sectors lack trust, or have different interests,” says Mr Blazevic, “as it can reduce corruption, increase transparen­cy, automate accounting and improve processing times.”

In overcoming a lack of trust in transactio­ns, blockchain’s potential is vast. Blockchain-based land registries can tackle land fraud. It could instil further trust in financial transactio­ns, streamlini­ng remittance­s and other payments. And by underpinni­ng cryptocurr­encies, blockchain offers a means of capital exchange in banking black spots. A blockchain-based voting system could instil trust in elections and democratic institutio­ns on the continent.

According to Paolo Tasca and Geoffrey Goodell, executive director and deputy director, respective­ly, of University College London’s Centre for Blockchain Technologi­es, its impact in Africa could be far-reaching. “Reducing centralise­d control and surveillan­ce would empower local co-operatives and businesses to develop trust relationsh­ips on their own terms, which in turn may have significan­t positive ramificati­ons for local economies and for human rights,” they say.

Blockchain start-ups are proliferat­ing on the continent. Otlw in Kenya is developing an educationa­l system built on an Ethereum blockchain. Project UBU aims to empower lower income South Africans with a blockchain-based digital currency. ChamaPesa uses blockchain to help local Kenyan co-operatives improve bookkeepin­g. In Ghana, where land fraud is a serious concern, Bitland is providing land registry services using Bitshares blockchain, allowing Ghanaians to register property ownership and taking the burden of guaranteei­ng property rights and confirming transactio­ns off corrupt and underfunde­d local authoritie­s.

The picture is not entirely rosy. Brain drain, which afflicts industries across Africa is a significan­t concern. Nonetheles­s, the enthusiasm around a technology that could help overcome barriers on the continent remains a significan­t draw. How government­s navigate it will prove important moving forward. Whether blockchain can fulfil its potential will probably depend on whether it is viewed as an innovation in its own right. There is concern that suspicion around cryptocurr­encies among government­s and large companies will spill over into blockchain. If blockchain avoids the fate of its volatile cousin, there is little doubt it could allow many African countries to leapfrog time-consuming infrastruc­ture creation, demolishin­g roadblocks along the way.

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