The Korea Times

Facebook’s plan to launch the digital currency Libra in 2020 is up in the air, after the alliance of key global corporate backers to manage it showed signs of fraying amid growing scrutiny from regulators across the world, mostly over potential money laun

- By Lee Kyung-min lkm@koreatimes.co.kr

New digital currency feared to challenge central banks

Facebook’s plan to launch the digital currency Libra in 2020 is up in the air, after the alliance of key global corporate backers to manage it showed signs of fraying amid growing scrutiny from regulators across the world, mostly over potential money laundering and tax evasion.

PayPal, one among the big name members that signed on for the project, withdrew Oct. 4 from the 28-member Switzerlan­d-based associatio­n set up to govern Libra, a move that the Wall Street Journal reported was also being considered by Visa, Mastercard and other financial partners.

The temporaril­y frustrated digital project comes amid growing expectatio­n that the digital currency would significan­tly undermine the authority of central banks, as fiat currencies in each country would be no match for the tech giant’s easy-to-use alternativ­e backed by its 2.7 billion users, over 84 percent of 3.2 billion internet users worldwide.

Facebook said Sept. 12 (local time) that it would develop Libra and Calibra, the default software for using it, to “allow people to send money around the globe with the same ease as sending a photo or text.”

Calibra is a digital wallet that handles crypto dealings and protects user privacy.

Once Facebook sets up e-commerce and various other services payable with Libra, central banks will have no intermedia­ry role to play, as users will not need to go through the “hassle” of exchanging or wiring currencies only valid in certain jurisdicti­ons, according to an expert. “Libra can and will become limitless and boundless,” Choi Hwoa-in, a blockchain adviser to the Financial Supervisor­y Service said.

Choice of end users?

“Given the future of currencies will be determined by end users, a digital currency guaranteed to ensure far easier and more convenient customer experience will become the currency of choice among people around the world,” the expert said.

While the tech giant said Libra will only be used for cross-border payments or in settlement services concerning very small sums, it did little to defuse concerns from the financial authoritie­s, mostly over its potential to destabiliz­e or interfere with sovereign monetary policy.

“Their concerns are not only legitimate but also understand­able,” Choi added.

“While Facebook claims the digital currency would not influence interest rates or yields, the authoritie­s cannot disregard possible currency values plummeting, not to mention the potential loss of control over the monetary supply and ability to impose capital controls among many other concerns.”

Also significan­t, according to Choi, was Facebook’s announceme­nt that Libra was backed by a 1:1 basket of currencies held in a reserve, 50 percent of which would be in U.S. dollars.

The remaining portion would consist of euros, yen, the British pounds and Singapore dollars, but not include the Chinese yuan.

This means that for any unit of Libra to exist, there must be the equivalent value in its reserve.

“Half the reserve being held with the U.S. dollar and excluding the Chinese currency amid the ongoing trade dispute signals the tech giant’s effort to calm down the U.S. government by offering a safe haven of sorts. This means the firm will do nothing to disorganiz­e the status quo where the dollar remains the world’s reserve currency,” she said. Concerns about price volatility, long raised as a major shortcomin­g of cryptocurr­encies, would be dispelled as Libra alongside “stable coins” would have its total amount pegged to other fiat currencies, mostly the U.S. dollar.

Stable coins, which work as a bridge between the cryptocurr­encies and fiat currencies, can be backed by companies using them with a one-to-one equivalent in U.S. dollars, or euros.

Examples include Tether coin (USDT), Gemini Dollar, USD Coin (USDC) and Paxos Standard (PAX).

Unlike other stable coins, pegged to fiat currencies, Libra can be pegged at a one-to-one equivalent to a basket of currencies in its reserves.

Mauro F. Guillen, director of the Lauder Institute at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School, said that Facebook’s initiative is unique because of its sheer size and the large number of companies that have signed up as partners.

“If they can create a trustworth­y and convenient to use currency, it could become a significan­t player. I think it is also yet another step at experiment­ation and at testing things out with regulators to see how they react. It’s too early to tell,” the Wharton School professor said.

Another key difference is scaleabili­ty. Bitcoin can process only seven transactio­ns per second, while Libra is expected to deal with 1,000 transactio­n per second.

Libra, knowing full well it falls far behind compared to the Visa network which can authorize up to 65,000 transactio­ns per second, said the per-second performanc­e will be gradually improved.

Natural course

Antonio Fatas, an economics professor at INSEAD, said Libra comes as a natural course of technologi­cal developmen­t, led by agility of fintechs while their competitor­s — central and commercial banks — are left behind, dragged down by “traditiona­l and convention­al norms.”

“Libra, like many of the other innovation­s in payments coming from fintechs of just tech companies, is trying to make the payments system faster and cheaper,” he said.

Fatas said it bears closer monitoring on how the central banks’ attempt to control the digital currency, staring with the Chinese People’s Bank of China.

“As payment technologi­es change fast, central banks are wondering whether they should take control of the innovation­s by offering a payments system that runs directly through access of individual­s to central bank accounts — basically how Central Bank Digital Currency works,” he said.

In his view, given banks today remain intermedia­ries of payments, they will not play a role in this potential new scenario.

“Several central banks are discussing this, and the Chinese central bank seems to ready to launch it soon. Although details are not clear, we will need to see what happens.”

 ?? Korea Times file ?? A small figurine stands on the representa­tions of virtual currency in front of the Libra logo
Korea Times file A small figurine stands on the representa­tions of virtual currency in front of the Libra logo
 ??  ?? Choi Hwoa-in Adviser to FSS
Choi Hwoa-in Adviser to FSS
 ??  ?? Mauro F. Guillen Wharton School professor
Mauro F. Guillen Wharton School professor
 ??  ?? Antonio Fatas
INSEAD economics professor
Antonio Fatas INSEAD economics professor

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