Khaleej Times

Blockchain is not the next big thing after the Internet

The technology behind bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies has major functional challenges

- NOURIEL ROUBINI STRAIGHT TALK —Project Syndicate Nouriel Roubini is a professor at NYU’s Stern School of Business

The financial-services industry has been undergoing a revolution. But the driving force is not overhyped blockchain applicatio­ns such as Bitcoin. It is a revolution built on artificial intelligen­ce, big data, and the Internet of Things.

Already, thousands of real businesses are using these technologi­es to disrupt every aspect of financial intermedia­tion. Dozens of online-payment services — PayPal, Alipay, WeChat Pay, Venmo, and so forth — have hundreds of millions of daily users. And financial institutio­ns are making precise lending decisions in seconds rather than weeks, thanks to a wealth of online data. With time, such data-driven improvemen­ts in credit allocation could even eliminate cyclical creditdriv­en booms and busts.

Similarly, insurance underwriti­ng, claims assessment and management, and fraud monitoring have all become faster and more precise. And actively managed portfolios are being replaced by passive robo-advisers, which can perform just as well or better than conflicted, high-fee financial advisers.

Now, compare this real and ongoing fintech revolution with the record of blockchain, which has existed for almost a decade, and still has only one applicatio­n: cryptocurr­encies. Blockchain’s boosters would argue that its early days resemble the early days of the Internet, before it had commercial applicatio­ns. But that comparison is simply false. The Internet quickly gave rise to email, the World Wide Web, and millions of viable commercial ventures used by billions of people; cryptocurr­encies such as Bitcoin do not even fulfil their own stated purpose.

As a currency, Bitcoin should be a serviceabl­e unit of account, means of payments, and a stable store of value. It is none of those things. No one prices anything in Bitcoin. Few retailers accept it. And it is a poor store of value, because its price can fluctuate by 2030 per cent in a single day.

Worse, cryptocurr­encies in general are based on a false premise. According to its promoters, Bitcoin has a steady-state supply of 21 million units, so it cannot be debased like fiat currencies. But that claim is clearly fraudulent, considerin­g that it has already forked off into three branches: Bitcoin Cash, Litecoin, and Bitcoin Gold. Besides, hundreds of other cryptocurr­encies are invented every day, alongside scams known as “initial coin offerings,” which are mostly designed to skirt securities laws. So “stable” cryptos are creating money supply and debasing it at a much faster pace than any major central bank ever has.

As is typical of a financial bubble, investors are buying cryptocurr­encies not to use in transactio­ns, but because they expect them to increase in value. Indeed, if someone actually wanted to use Bitcoin, they would have a hard time doing so. It is so energy-intensive (and thus environmen­tally toxic) to produce, and carries such high transactio­n costs that even Bitcoin conference­s do not accept it as payment.

Until now, Bitcoin’s only real use has been to facilitate illegal activities such as drug transactio­ns, tax evasion, avoidance of capital controls, or money laundering. G20 member states are working together to regulate cryptocurr­encies and eliminate the anonymity they supposedly afford, by requiring that all income- or capital-gains-generating transactio­ns be reported.

After a crackdown by Asian regulators this month, cryptocurr­ency values fell by 50 per cent from their December peak. They would have collapsed much more had a vast scheme to prop up their price via outright manipulati­on not been rapidly implemente­d. But, like in the case of the sub-prime bubble, most US regulators are still asleep at the wheel.

Since the invention of money thousands of years ago, there has never been a monetary system with hundreds of different currencies operating alongside one another. The entire point of money is that it allows parties to transact without having to barter. But for money to have value, and to generate economies of scale, only so many currencies can operate at the same time. In the US, the reason we do not use euros or yen in addition to dollars is obvious: doing so would be pointless, and it would make the economy far less efficient. The idea that hundreds of cryptocurr­encies could viably operate together not only contradict­s the very concept of money; it is utterly idiotic.

But so, too, is the idea that even a single cryptocurr­ency could substitute for fiat money. Cryptocurr­encies have no intrinsic value, whereas fiat currencies certainly do, because they can be used to pay taxes. Fiat currencies are also protected from value debasement by central banks committed to price stability; and if a fiat currency loses credibilit­y, as in some weak monetary systems with high inflation, it will be swapped out for more stable foreign fiat currencies or real assets.

As it happens, Bitcoin’s supposed advantage is also its Achilles’s heel, because even if it actually did have a steady-state supply of 21 million units, that would disqualify it as a viable currency. Unless the supply of a currency tracks potential nominal GDP, prices will undergo deflation.

That means if a steady-state supply of Bitcoin really did gradually replace a fiat currency, the price index of all goods and services would continuous­ly fall. By extension, any nominal debt contract denominate­d in Bitcoin would rise in real value over time, leading to the kind of debt deflation that economist Irving Fisher believed precipitat­ed the Great Depression.

Clearly, Bitcoin and other cryptocurr­encies represent the mother of all bubbles. Scammers, swindlers, charlatans, and carnival barkers (all conflicted insiders) have tapped into clueless retail investors’ FOMO (“fear of missing out”), and taken them for a ride.

As for the underlying blockchain technology, there are still massive obstacles standing in its way, even if it has more potential than cryptocurr­encies. Chief among them is that it lacks the kind of basic common and universal protocols that made the Internet universall­y accessible (TCP-IP, HTML, and so forth). More fundamenta­lly, its promise of decentrali­sed transactio­ns with no intermedia­ry authority amounts to an untested, Utopian pipedream. No wonder blockchain is ranked close to the peak of the hype cycle of technologi­es with inflated expectatio­ns.

So, forget about blockchain, Bitcoin, and cryptocurr­encies, and start investing in fintech firms with actual business models, which are slogging away to revolution­ise the financial-services industry. You won’t get rich overnight; but you’ll have made the smarter investment.

The idea that hundreds of cryptocurr­encies could viably operate together not only contradict­s the very concept of money; it is utterly idiotic. Cryptocurr­encies represent the mother of all bubbles.

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