The Sunday Guardian

CRYPTOCURR­ENCY: ITS TIME HAS COME

Ten odd years since Bitcoin, the best known of the cryptocurr­encies started in 2009, Indians own 60% of the world’s cryptocurr­encies via 15 million people.

- GAUTAM MUKHERJEE

Cryptocurr­ency is the Guy Fawkes to sovereign legal tender. This 21st century avatar is the disruptive spawn of the digital age, now using stage three of internet efficiency and proliferat­ion, dubbed Web3. It offers a global currency that goes by thousands of names. But none of them have underlying assets like national currencies. Neither is their value guaranteed. Its reckoning comes from an investment frenzy of speculatio­n and the times in lands from cyberspace to transact with convention­al currency.

This virtual Guy Fawkes used the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto for its alleged inventor. It does not want to blow up the King and the House of Lords. It simply wants to operate as it is, anonymousl­y, without regulation, across the digital universe. A self-driving train without a central bank at its apex.

Ten odd years since Bitcoin, the best known of the cryptocurr­encies started in 2009, Indians own 60% of the world’s cryptocurr­encies via 15 million people, trading, investing, or creating blocks for the chain in a process named mining.

Large cryptocurr­ency exchanges such as Wazirx, COINDCX, Giottus, Zebpay and Bitbns here are partnered by Punjab National Bank, IDFC First Bank, Federal Bank, Deutsche Bank, Bank of India, Bank of Maharashtr­a, Indian Bank. This lot clocked trading volumes of $977.68 million on the spot market on 24 November 2021.The biggest banks such as SBI, HDFC and ICICI Bank have stayed away so far.

Foreign firms such as Tiger Global, Sequioa Capital, b Capital, Andreessen Horowitz, Paradigm, Ribbit Capital, pumped in $500 million into India’s cryptocurr­ency and blockchain technology in 2021. This has taken the Indian valuation to $1.9 billion, up from $500 million six months ago.

It is not all speculatio­n. Tata Steel has executed a Standard Chartered Bank/ Contour blockchain-enabled, paperless export order, to a metals major in Bangladesh. This follows on from an HSBC platform enabled trade finance transactio­n with a UAE based company in April 2021. These fraud-proof, confidenti­al, and safe blockchain transactio­ns, could be completed in hours instead of days, bypassing a heap of paperwork. Blockchain technology offers a collective of users that perform their own gatekeepin­g and custodial functions.

But all is not well in paradise. Valuations of the some 6,000 odd cryptocurr­encies in operation are volatile, and do not operate with safety nets of any kind. The big ones are Bitcoin, Ethereum, Tether, Solana, Cardano, Polkadot, Avalanche. A New York based website Coindesk provides news on cryptocurr­encies. Bitcoin valuation at its highest ever was $69,000 earlier this November. It was at $55,460.96 on 24 November 2021.

There is an effort to market cryptocurr­encies as a get-rich-quick scheme for gullible investors. This could come back to bite the government in the absence of regulation.

However, news of coming Indian government legislatio­n in the winter session of Parliament also panicked up to a 20% decline in value. A similar knee-jerk reaction followed on from remarks made by the RBI governor in April 2021.

It is a computer-generated phenomenon, using a book-building process it calls “mining”. It is a peerto-peer payment system and operates internatio­nally with no exchange rate arbitrage. Bitcoin is used to buy goods and services at networked online stores, turns into cash at designated Bitcoin ATMS, and can even transact at some brickand-mortar establishm­ents. Many people use it as an investment to speculate on its ups and downs. Bitcoin balances are kept in encrypted online ledgers. It descends from cyberspace to cash in its chips for hard currency, or in exchange for goods and services.

Truth be told, no government can actually stop it, given that they are all becoming more and more dependent on the digital universe. It has created its own crypto platform on a raft of computers. Like an amoeba, it can break away, multiply and reform in fresh clusters, if threatened. Countries worry about its run-away potential to be used for “illegal transactio­ns”, even as they grapple with ways to put a saddle and bridle on it. But a ham-fisted approach could drive it out of reach into the encrypted Dark Web.

If you can’t beat it, you may have to join it. This seems to be what India proposes to do, with the issue of its own RBI issued cryptocurr­ency. Some are already naming it Bharatcoin. It will probably muck in on the “private sector” Bitcoin and friends user platforms. This will give it a large slice of the cryptocurr­ency pie, infiltrate this anonymous universe to better understand how it works, and gain the opportunit­y to make further advances.

Attempting to invent its own internatio­nal delivery system will kill it dead in the water, especially if other government­s decide to also launch. Besides Niti Aayog is already proposing “fullstack digital banks” to end physical branches run entirely on the Web3 internet. It cites the success of UPI with over Rs 4 lakh crore in value of transactio­ns, while Aadhar based authentica­tions have reached 55 crore.

Prescient El Salvador, the first country to do so, has accepted Bitcoin, the first and most famous of the cryptocurr­encies, as legal tender from June 2021. It works alongside normal money for purchases and payments. Cuba and Ukraine are also in the process.

The US, mainly with a view to harness it for taxation has classified it, not as currency but a “Money Services Business” (MSB). It already operates legitimate­ly in the US “Derivative­s” market. The American Internal Revenue Service (IRS) or taxation arm, classifies Bitcoin as “property”. And where the US goes, most of the free world must follow.

Canada calls Bitcoin a “Commodity”. Australia classifies it as an “Asset”. The EU also allow its use, and has exempted it from Value Added Tax (VAT). Britain has put Bitcoin under some tax regulation­s. Germany is regarded as the crypto capital of Europe. Many of its stores have been accepting Bitcoin for several years now. Recently, Germany has passed a law to allow special funds to allocate 20% of their capital in crypto assets. India is about to try regulating them, with a view to taxing them as assets, put in protective provisions to safeguard the unwary, and perhaps try to popularise the sarkari offering by banning private cryptocurr­encies.

Interestin­gly, both China and Russia, large totalitari­an systems, have banned cryptocurr­encies. How they will enforce such a ban offshore remains to be seen. Minnows such as Vietnam, Bolivia, Columbia and Ecuador have also turned their backs on Bitcoin.

Bitcoin is the potential darling of black money, a digital hawala on the brink of legitimacy worldwide. It can be used anonymousl­y by intelligen­ce services, evangelist­s, angel investors, internatio­nal NGOS, tax-dodgers, criminals, drug cartels, terrorists, and anybody willing to take some risk for possible profit. Like the internet, it is a freeing agent. There is no guarantee than Indians will use “Bharatcoin” when they want to do something naughty or illegal. The only way to regulate it is by following suspicious digital trails and nab the money when it lands in the convention­al monetary universe.

It seems like many moons ago when Ajit Panja, then Minister of Informatio­n and Broadcasti­ng (I&B), responded to an ignorant clamour in Parliament that wanted satellite TV banned. Pernicious content, said the naysayers. It will spoil the morals of our children and youth. And this when there was just Star TV available in addition to DD. There was no internet beyond slow “dial-up” in rare clusters. Panja, in turn, said it couldn’t be done. This country was served by a satellite in space that had a giant “footprint” ranging from Singapore to the Arabian Gulf, with India in-between. It was a far cry from the technology used by terrestria­l TV. Anyone could make a dish antenna in a roadside workshop in the event the government was tempted to ban their manufactur­e. Now, in the age of OTT and streaming, and yes, Web3, this Panja story seems unreal.

In Afghanista­n, then also under Mullah Omar’s Taliban, people made dish antennas to access banned pornograph­y. You were hung if you were caught there, but this did not deter people.

Cryptocurr­ency is here to stay. It has already knocked a few spots off the concept of sovereignt­y, and will only advance its game in future. Blockchain works. So does Mining. We may be headed towards a World Currency. All one can do is join the fray and try to duke it out in the free market in the interim.

 ?? ?? 'It is not all speculatio­n.
Tata Steel has executed a Standard Chartered Bank/ Contour blockchain-enabled, paperless export order, to a metals major in Bangladesh.'
'It is not all speculatio­n. Tata Steel has executed a Standard Chartered Bank/ Contour blockchain-enabled, paperless export order, to a metals major in Bangladesh.'
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India