Oroville Mercury-Register

California moves regulate cryptocurr­ency

- By Don Thompson

California, which has a economy larger than all but four countries and where much of the world’s technologi­cal innovation is born, on Wednesday became the first state to formally begin examining how to broadly adapt to cryptocurr­ency and related innovation­s.

Following a path laid out by President Joe Biden in March, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed an executive order for state agencies to move in tandem with the federal government to craft regulation­s for digital currencies. It also calls for officials to explore incorporat­ing broader blockchain computer coding into the government operations.

Evolving blockchain and cryptocurr­ency technology “is potentiall­y an explosive creator of new companies and new jobs and new opportunit­ies,” said Dee Dee Myers, a senior advisor to Newsom and director of the Governor’s Office of Business and Economic Developmen­t.

“So there are a lot of opportunit­ies,” she said. “There’s also a lot of unknowns in the industry and so that’s another reason we want to engage early.”

Newsom’s order says the state — home to Silicon Valley and financial innovators like PayPal and Square — should be out front in figuring out how to adapt to new technologi­es.

“Too often government lags behind technologi­cal advancemen­ts, so we’re getting ahead of the curve on this, laying the foundation to allow for consumers and business to thrive,” Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement.

California has about 39 million residents and its economy is more than $3.1 trillion, larger than the United Kingdom and India. Newsom said his order is a step toward making it the nation’s first state “to establish a comprehens­ive, thoughtful, and harmonized regulatory and business environmen­t for crypto assets.”

Cryptocurr­encies, which are built on blockchain database technology, have exploded in popularity in recent years. About 16% of U.S. adults have invested in, traded, or used cryptocurr­encies and the percentage is much higher among younger men. Biden’s executive order in part asks the Federal Reserve to consider whether it should create its own digital currency.

Blockchain creates the underlying transparen­cy of a decentrali­zed but publicly viewable ledger. The technology can also be used to record other types of informatio­n, such as property records. The records are held on many computers that together form a global network so that no one and no institutio­n can control them.

There is heavy disagreeme­nt about the legitimacy of cryptocurr­ency, even among some of the world’s richest people. Elon Musk is an avid supporter of dogecoin while Warren Buffet recently said he wouldn’t pay $25 for all of the world’s bitcoin, the most popular cryptocurr­ency. Each bitcoin is currently valued at about $38,000 but fluctuates wildly.

California’s approach will help to legitimize the technology and bring it into the mainstream, said cryptocurr­ency skeptic Hilary Allen, a financial regulation professor at American University in Washington, D.C. But she doesn’t think it’s the best approach for the state and its residents.

She said private investors are most likely to benefit, while state government should seek simpler technologi­cal solutions rather than turning to technology that “is by its very nature complex and inefficien­t.”

“While this approach will create more of a market for crypto ... it is unlikely to produce the best outcomes for users of public services in California,” Allen said.

California may be first to try to develop a comprehens­ive approach, but Ohio was the first to attempt to accept virtual currency for government services in 2018, though the program was soon discontinu­ed because few people used it.

 ?? CHARLES KRUPA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The Bitcoin logo appears on the display screen of a cryptocurr­ency ATM at a store in Salem, N.H.
CHARLES KRUPA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The Bitcoin logo appears on the display screen of a cryptocurr­ency ATM at a store in Salem, N.H.

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