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Existing digital currencies unlikely to last says BofE governor Bailey

Cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin do not have the right structure to work as a long-term payments method, says Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey.

3 comments

Existing digital currencies unlikely to last says BofE governor Bailey

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

Speaking on a World Economic Forum panel, Bailey said that there has been great innovation in payments in recent years.

However, he continued: “Have we landed on what I would call the design, governance and arrangements for what I might call a sort of lasting digital currency? No, I don’t think we’re there yet, honestly. I don’t think cryptocurrencies as originally formulated are it.”

The problem, for Bailey, is the volatility associated with cryptocurrencies, as seen in recent weeks with bitcoin's wildly fluctuating price.

This is where central bank digital currencies have an advantage. Bailey says it is right to explore these, adding "those issues are up for grabs".

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Comments: (3)

John Schlesinger Chief Enterprise Architect at Temenos

It is not just volatility, it is also throughput. Bitcoin is set up for settlement but not for clearing. It seems that Satoshi Nakamoto got them confused...

Christopher Williams Chairman at RTpay

While I agree the crypto format is not in itself suitable for payments, that role is being made possible by companies like PayPal acting as clearing agent. Having bitcoins on account with PayPal enables one to enjoy the added potential capital gain (and risk, of course) of holding BTCs, while having the balance used for fiat transactions at a low conversion cost. 

With interest rates low, and even negative in some places, this does make taking the risk quite interesting for the Robin Hood-type traders - and is likely to become a bigger issue as it is copied around the world. The added danger will be if the local PayPal equivalents do not have the capital to manage major movements; while the danger for central banks is loss of control of domestic money supply. 

So not one to be ignored ..     

Eli Talmor CEO at ID-Bound

The average Consumer will ask this simple question : Is my digital wallet for cryptocurrency is more secure than banking app. for fiat currency? The answer , at the moment , is NO. Let's discuss the cybersecurity first! 

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