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The Digital Agenda of Virtual Currencies in the Bitcoin Age: Regulation, Anonymity and Cybercrime

Paper Session

Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019 12:30 PM - 2:15 PM

Hilton Atlanta, 204
Hosted By: International Trade and Finance Association
  • Chair: Joseph Pelzman, George Washington University

How Have Cryptocurrency Participants Changed?

Gina Pieters
,
University of Chicago

Abstract

In 2017, Bitcoin prices increased from $1000 to over $20,000, futures were launched on well-known formal financial markets, and there was an influx of both new buyers and new alternatives. This, in turn, led to new levels of regulatory scrutiny. In this paper we summarize and compare firm-level data from the 2017 and 2018 Cambridge Benchmarking Surveys, reflecting data collected from hundreds of global market participants, to establish to what extent this influx of alternatives and regulatory attention has changed cryptocurrency exchanges, wallets, payments, mining, and ICO activity. If the market has undergone a fundamental change then any corresponding data series needs to be truncated or must formally incorporate the discontinuity.

Global Anti-money Laundering Governance of Digital Currencies

Joseph Pelzman
,
George Washington University

Abstract

What implications do cryptocurrencies pose for global anti-money laundering efforts? The implications of cryptocurrencies for global anti-money laundering stem from both the threats of their illicit uses as virtual currencies and from the opportunities presented by their underlying blockchain technologies. The Financial Action Task Force (FATF), proposes an interesting approach to balance between the existing threats and opportunities that cryptocurrencies present. However, its suggestion for a looser, decentralized governance networks is regarded as less effective than traditional centralized forms of anti-money laundering practices.
This paper assesses the global coordination proposed by the FATF.

Theoretical Foundations of Complementary And Virtual Currencies

Pompeo Della Posta
,
University of Pisa

Abstract

The recent success of bitcoins, with their technological side aspects mainly associated with the development of the still rather obscure blockchain mechanism, is accompanied not only by the diffusion of many other virtual currencies (or cryptocurrencies, to underline their unclear functioning), but also by the more limited attempts, of a totally different nature, to introduce local and complementary currencies.
In this article I compare complementary and virtual currencies, in order to highlight not only the many substantial differences between them, but also the few possible similarities. In doing so I also look at the past literature in order to identify their theoretical roots. Complementary currencies are based on the idea that the functions of unit of account and of medium of exchange can be separated. In particular, they refer to the old notion of imaginary currency to be used as a unit of account, besides the effective currency in circulation to be used for transactions. Virtual currencies, instead, can be interpreted as satisfying Hayek’s idea of denationalizing and decentralizing money creation, preventing any monopoly and realizing competition also in the printing of money, something made possible by his rejection of Gresham’s law.
Discussant(s)
Marta Bengoa
,
City University of New York-City College
Gina Pieters
,
University of Chicago
Joseph Pelzman
,
George Washington University
Maria E. de Boyrie
,
New Mexico State University
JEL Classifications
  • E5 - Monetary Policy, Central Banking, and the Supply of Money and Credit
  • F3 - International Finance