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Not a Cryptocurrency: Ukraine Completes National Digital Currency Pilot

Not a cryptocurrency: ukraine completes national digital currency pilot

Not a Cryptocurrency: Ukraine Completes National Digital Currency Pilot

The National Bank of Ukraine, the country’s central bank, has been working on a pilot project to test the usefulness of a digital version of its currency, the Hryvnia. The bank announced today that it had completed the pilot and would be investigating further uses of the token.

e-Hryvnia Isn’t a Cryptocurrency

While noting that the country is “ahead of world leaders,” the bank’s payment systems director Alexander Yablunivsky clarified that the country has not launched a cryptocurrency. Cryptonaughts will appreciate that he was very cognizant of the fact that a cryptocurrency is not an instrument issued by a central bank. According to a translation of the original news report:

We are not talking about cryptocurrency, we are talking about digital currency of the central bank. It can be implemented on both the centralized registry technology and the decentralized one. This is a completely separate issue, which follows from the target model chosen.

As we discussed when JP Morgan allegedly entered the crypto space with its “own coin,” there are properties that either disqualify or qualify a blockchain token as a cryptocurrency. JPM Coin failed all the important tests, and Yablunivsky understands that the Ukrainian national token will as well.

By definition, a bank must have more control over its issued currency than the traditional immutable ledger can offer. Many properties of blockchain are useful in traditional finance, but some are counterintuitive. A crypto must be immutable and censorship-resistant. It must be fungible anywhere. It isn’t subject to identity verification or monetary issuance policies.

e-Hryvnia: What For?

Ukraine has been investigating the potential of blockchain technology since 2016. They’ve finally got a working product, but are not yet sure how they will use it. The primary use cases will be peer-to-peer payments and potentially international settlement.

Not a cryptocurrency: ukraine completes national digital currency pilot

As Yablunivsky correctly noted, his country is one of the few this advanced. That being the case, it will be some time before there will be instruments that make sense to work with other central banks. But the true believers among us believe there will come a day that the IMF issues and services loans on a distributed ledger, if not more.

One aspect of issuing a digital currency is their potential use on regulated exchanges. By using a blockchain token of any stripe, the potential for local Ukranian exchanges to have fiat on-and-off-ramps (which then opens them up to much of global finance) is even greater than the use cases for the host of stablecoins we’ve currently got.

The next news on this subject will be what the central bank decides to actually do. Will Ukranian bank accounts store cryptocurrencies and the e-Hryvnia alongside each other?

One aspect of blockchain that is indisputably superior to existing currency issuance methods is the tracking of counterfeit notes. Counterfeit bills are notorious in traditional fiat, giving rise to an entire industry of verification tools and law enforcement. Distributed ledgers make such things obsolete.

Published at Tue, 26 Feb 2019 07:45:24 +0000

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“Crypto-Shekel” May Be in the Cards for Israeli Lawmakers

Three government officials in Israel’s Ministry of Finance have confirmed they are considering issuing a state-sponsored cryptocurrency, the Shekel, to reduce the number of cash transactions within the middle eastern country.


The Push for a Regulated Digital Currency

The Bank of Israel is looking into the possibility of a state-sponsored digital currency, according to a few government officials that agreed to comment with the requirement of anonymity. The aim with this initiative is to reduce the country’s cash transactions, which are often viewed as being used for increased tax evasion and money laundering.

The Ministry of Finance is looking to include a clause in a piece of legislation due for approval in January that would help create the legal framework for a Israeli cryptocurrency. The clause will detail the proposal and give the Ministry the ability to start testing how this new currency would work and be distributed.

State-Sponsored Crypto Is All the Rage

Israel joins the growing list of countries that are adopting crypto and other blockchain technologies. Earlier this year, Bitcoin was declared legal tender in Japan, allowing businesses to accept the controversial currency just as it would accept fiat currencies. Japanese and South Korean banks are also testing how cryptocurrencies can be implemented to streamline cross-border payments between the two countries.

Japan is also set to launch their own currency in the coming year. With the support of many financial and regulatory bodies, they plan to launch their currency with the proposed name “J-coin” before the 2020 Olympic games in Tokyo. Sweden is also following the crypto-path, looking to launch an e-kronor in the future. They cite the fact that there is decreased cash usage in the Norwegian nation and that the country’s banks and businesses prefer non-cash payments. In fact, 900 of Sweden’s 1,600 banks no longer hold cash reserves or accept cash deposits.

Japanese Retail Investors Dominate Bitcoin Trading

Blockchain technology, which is essentially a public account that anyone can access to verify transactions, has huge implications for anyone trying stop financial fraud. It makes sense for governments to embrace the new technology, but we’ll have to wait and see how it will work at that level.

What do you think about state-sponsored cryptocurrencies? Do you think they’ll have a place in the market? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Pixabay.

The post “Crypto-Shekel” May Be in the Cards for Israeli Lawmakers appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

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