Houston Chronicle

Banks should be wary of Facebook’s Libra

- By Elaine Ou Ou is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. She is a blockchain engineer at Global Financial Access in San Francisco.

On Wednesday, Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, testified about his company’s cryptocurr­ency project at a hearing held by the House Financial Services Committee. Zuckerberg tried to reassure Congress that Facebook’s Libra would square the circle between financial inclusion and regulatory adherence, consumer privacy and proactive fraud detection. The one thing he didn’t manage to address is whether the world really wants a crypto offering from the social media giant.

Cryptocurr­ency has acquired an unseemly status where any use is automatica­lly assumed to have nefarious ends. It doesn’t help that the most prominent example, Bitcoin, has been used to make possible some horrific criminal conduct. At the same time, a lack of mainstream adoption gives cryptocurr­ency few redeeming advocates. No surprise, then, that regulators regard Facebook’s proposal with suspicion.

It’s not that legitimate businesses don’t want crypto; it’s that their customers don’t want to use it for payment. When buying stuff on the internet, consumers will choose the payment method that imposes the lowest transactio­n cost on themselves — that’s generally the credit card option, which allows deferred payment as well as the accrual of miles or points. An online business that refuses to accept credit cards will always lose out to a competitor that does.

But what if you don’t have any competitor­s? Facebook enjoys quasi-monopoly status when it comes to consumer attention, controllin­g the reach and distributi­on of content across its network of users. (So far, 46 attorneys general, including Ken Paxton from Texas, have joined a New York-led antitrust investigat­ion of the company and its dominance as a social media platform.)

As the driver of over one-fourth of web traffic, Facebook has a lot of influence over who sees what on the internet. And with over 2.3 billion monthly active users around the world, it’s not a stretch to imagine that the company could have similar influence over who pays whom, and how.

Mark Zuckerberg’s congressio­nal testimony makes it clear that he takes inspiratio­n from China, where WeChat serves as a one-stop portal to the greater internet. There, users conduct their banking, shopping, and bill payments without ever leaving the app. The ability to control users’ economic interactio­ns comes with the privilege of deciding the medium of exchange. If it follows suit, Facebook may end up looking like another familiar monopolist — our own government, which creates the national currency we use to pay our taxes.

It’s no wonder regulators and central banks view the Libra project as a threat to the internatio­nal monetary system. In a recent report, the G7 Working Group warns that global cryptocurr­encies could undermine cross-jurisdicti­onal efforts to combat illicit finance. All internatio­nal transactio­ns using U.S. dollars currently clear through the New York Federal Reserve, where they can be monitored and stopped if deemed sufficient­ly unsavory. Members of the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs, for instance, have expressed concern over Facebook’s ability to handle economic sanctions on foreign regimes.

Zuckerberg has promised that Calibra, Facebook’s payment app, will include robust compliance systems to fulfill regulatory obligation­s. However, the greater risk is that Calibra will go above and beyond its regulatory duty. Facebook already employs a more restrictiv­e speech code than legally required — the platform blocks various forms of hate speech, harassment, misinforma­tion and inauthenti­c behavior. Publishers must accept Facebook’s opaque Terms of Service or risk not being seen at all. It’s one thing to deny politicall­y incorrect figures the ability to share inflammato­ry content; it’s another thing to leave them economical­ly isolated.

In a competitiv­e market, those who disagree with Facebook’s terms could simply take their business elsewhere. The Libra Associatio­n currently includes twenty-one member companies, after some early members dropped out. If Facebook mimics WeChat in establishi­ng itself as a go-to payment portal, those former members may have no choice but to return to the cartel.

Global regulators are so worried about preserving their own monopoly status that they’ve forgotten that monopolies have victims. Just look at what Facebook did to publishers. When Facebook emerged as the arbiter of eyeballs, publishers lost control of their audiences and ad revenue, and consumers ended up with a barrage of clickbait. Facebook could take control of the economic relationsh­ip between businesses and their customers, with greater restrictio­ns on financial transactio­ns than ever before. It’s almost enough to make you wish for a decentrali­zed currency.

Just look at what Facebook did to publishers. Facebook could take control of the economic relationsh­ip between businesses and their customers, with greater restrictio­ns on financial transactio­ns than ever before.

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