China’s Odd Relationship With Blockchain and Crypto
Following China’s ban on ICOs and fiat to Bitcoin exchanges; as well as the more recent proposal to outlaw crypto mining, many observers believe the Chinese authorities are opposed to blockchain technology.
“It can serve the real economy in terms of circulation and distribution. In the field of industrial economy, blockchain allows various assets to flow in the digital world, so it is a real gateway to digitalization for industries.”
China Hates Investment Speculation
At the same time, caution comes from the speculative nature of cryptocurrency. Which some say distracts from the core fundamentals of what blockchain should be about – a tool to serve people. And not a get rich quick scheme. Paul Sin, Asia Pacific Blockchain Lab lead at Deloitte said:“When all the noise, hype and speculation dies down, we expect an increasing focus on the real application of the technology in solving real business problems to create solid synergetic values.”Not only that, but according to , officials are quite happy to say no to crypto, but yes to blockchain technology. Moreover, this seemingly paradoxical approach comes from a fear of blockchain’s potential to disrupt the status quo. Speaking to , venture capitalist and technology executive, Edith Yeung, said:
“What the Chinese government is not endorsing is the crypto part of things. Which is challenging the fundamental of financial systems.”
China’s National Cryptocurrency
of a Chinese central bank digital currency (CBDC) has been in circulation since the end of 2017. And while some see this as positive for the industry, in terms of blockchain adoption, Nouriel Roubini disagrees. Speaking to the , the American-Iranian economist said:“This is nonsense. If anything, CBDCs would likely replace all private digital payment systems, regardless of whether they are connected to traditional bank accounts or crypto-currencies.“
Central Bank-Issued Digital Currency (CBDC), Nations are actively exploring. Russia plans to develop the cryptoruble. Japan wants the J-coin. The Bank of Canada released a thirty-page paper arguing for its own CBDC. China, the United Kingdom, India….and list goes on — CryptoShah (@CryptoShahh)