How do private digital currencies affect government policy? By - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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How do private digital currencies affect government policy? By - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

How do private digital currencies affect government policy? By Raskin, Saleh, Yermack Discussion by Gur Huberman Columbia Business School Singapore, November 2018 Agenda The models background vision & relevance Digital currency


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How do private digital currencies affect government policy? By Raskin, Saleh, Yermack

Discussion by Gur Huberman Columbia Business School Singapore, November 2018

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Agenda

  • The model’s background vision & relevance
  • Digital currency governance & its implications
  • Single/streamlined control

Vs Protocol guided/controlled

  • The model’s main findings

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Context

  • A corrupt regime
  • Presumably W/O much credibility

Creates (?) Welcomes (?) Tolerates (?) PRIVATE DIGITAL CURRENCY

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Territory, Time Frames

  • Single period
  • Territorially, political & monetary regimes identical

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Agenda

  • The model’s background vision & relevance
  • Digital currency governance & its implications
  • Single/streamlined control

Vs Protocol guided/controlled

  • The model’s main findings

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Typology

Private Decentralized Digital Currency Private Centralized Digital Currency Public Decentralized Digital Currency Public Centralized Digital Currency

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Private Digital Currencies

  • Control? Regulation?
  • Who controls balances/transfers? Identities? Disputes?
  • Territorial relevance? Is it an international currency?
  • Temporal relevance?
  • How do you start the digital currency?
  • How do you stop it?
  • If used to evade capital controls, is it welfare enhancing?
  • The mechanism that confers credibility & value on the digital currency?
  • Bitcoin is one model.

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If a Trusted Party is Necessary…

  • It has some control/discretion

=>

  • Can extract rents
  • Can adapt to changing circumstances

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Econo nomics of the he Bitcoin n Paymen ent System em

Gur Huberman, Columbia Business School Jacob D. Leshno, Chicago Booth Ciamac Moallemi, Columbia Business School

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Cryptocurrencies

  • Decentralized Electronic payment systems
  • Bitcoin being the first, many other followed and offer different functions
  • Decentralized, two-sided markets
  • Users receive similar services to PayPal, Fedwire; Miners provide infrastructure
  • Security and Market design enabled by blockchain protocol
  • Novel economic structure
  • Owned by no one
  • Rules fixed by a protocol
  • Participants are price-takers

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Traditional Payment Systems vs. Bitcoin

Rules Set by firm/org Fixed by protocol Infrastructure Procured by firm/org Revenue, entry/exit Revenue Fees set by firm/org Equilibrium congestion pricing, all agents served

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Protocol Rules, No Policy Discretion

  • Even when circumstances change

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Two & a Half Constituencies

  • Users – send TXs
  • Miners – provide computing infrastructure
  • TX recipients – confer value on the coin

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Miners are Crucial

  • Must be compensated – in native coin
  • Native coin loses value => miners quit => system collapses
  • Should the model incorporate this possibility?

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No Trusted Party => Crypto, or Protocol-governed

  • =>
  • Commitment to rules
  • Rules are hard to change even when circumstances change

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Agenda

  • The model’s background vision & relevance
  • Digital currency governance & its implications
  • Single/streamlined control

Vs Protocol guided/controlled

  • The model’s main findings

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  • Risk Reduction

Non-positive correlation with local economic risks provides investors with a diversification opportunity

  • Who is supplying the digital currency & is on the other side
  • f the diversification position?
  • Is the digital currency the issuer’s liability?
  • Restrained Monetary Policy

The difficulty of excluding digital currencies from the market reduces gains from seigniorage, thereby inducing lower inflation

  • Difficulty of exclusion?
  • E.g., Outlaw wiring money into/from exchanges

Main Finding 1:

Digital currencies enhance citizen welfare

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  • Diversification

Digital currencies serve as a hedge asset, thereby facilitating investment in high-risk economies

  • In what sense are currencies an asset? If we make

more, are we wealthier?

  • Credible Commitment

Digital currencies facilitate a credible commitment to disciplined monetary policy, thereby enhancing expected returns from local investment

  • Can terms of digital currencies adapt as circumstances

change? Main Finding 2:

Digital currencies encourage local investment

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  • Local Investment

Increased local investment yields higher tax revenue (holding tax rates constant)

  • Higher revenue to the corrupt is good?
  • Welfare Gains

Digital & original money side by side? Foregone network benefits of a single money? Main Finding 3: Digital currencies may be desirable for corrupt sovereigns Desirable also for non-corrupt sovereigns? Who is corrupt? Who is to say who is corrupt? Where’s corruption in the model?

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Model: Assets

  • Local productive capital
  • Taxable
  • Proxy for local investment
  • Private digital currency
  • Untaxable (reflects enforcement difficulty)
  • Non-positively correlated with local economy

Source of (negative) correlation? Source of value fluctuations?

  • Unproductive capital
  • Zero real return

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Agenda

  • The model’s background vision & relevance
  • Digital currency governance & its implications
  • Single/streamlined control

Vs Protocol guided/controlled

  • The model’s main findings

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The Stuff Dreams Are Made Of

  • A small sliver of the population understands blockchain technology

well enough to engage in fierce, esoteric debate over the meaning and relative importance of various ideas and terms.

  • At the highest levels, everyone practices a kind of obscurantism,

unwitting or otherwise.

  • Elsewhere, people fake it.

22 The New Yorker, 10/22/2018