Mark Zuckerberg will tell Congress that Libra can bring financial services to the worldâs 1.7 billion unbanked.
And if Libra doesnât do it, he said, Chinaâs new central-bank crypto will.
Facebookâs CEO released his written testimony a day before his scheduled appearance before the U.S. House of Representatives Financial Services Committee, stating that Libra is envisioned as a global payments service that can help people send money more easily.
âThe current system is failing them,â Zuckerberg said. âThe financial industry is stagnant and there is no digital financial architecture to support the innovation we need. I believe this problem can be solved, and Libra can help.â
Notably, he highlighted Facebookâs role â and the backlash the company has faced â in his remarks, writing:
âI believe this is something that needs to get built, but I understand weâre not the ideal messenger right now. Weâve faced a lot of issues over the past few years, and Iâm sure people wish it was anyone but Facebook putting this idea forward.â
Zuckerberg cautioned that the U.S. might lose its âfinancial leadershipâ on the world stage if Libra is not allowed to launch, noting that âChina is moving quickly to launch similar ideas in the coming months.â
He added that Facebook will not be part of launching Libra âanywhere in the worldâ until âall U.S. regulatorsâ approve of the project, and will support delaying any launch until this has happened.
The CEO also emphasized that Facebook does not âexpect to be leadingâ any efforts to further Libraâs development given that the projectâs governing council, the Libra Association, has now been formally signed into existence with 21 members (including Calibra, a Facebook subsidiary, and Breakthrough Initiatives, a venture capital fund that Zuckerberg is involved in).
Zuckerberg claimed that Libra has no intention of competing with sovereign currencies or with participating in monetary policy, writing that it âis the province of central banks.â
â[The Libra Association] will work with the Federal Reserve and other central banks responsible for monetary policy to make sure that is the case,â he wrote.
The group even expects regulators to prohibit Libra from entering this space, he said, writing:
âWe expect the regulatory framework for the Libra Association will ensure that the Association cannot interfere with monetary policy. Libra is also being designed with economic security and stability in mind, and it will be fully backed through the Libra Reserve.â
Zuckerberg even suggested that Libra may be better able to fight financial crimes than the existing system, noting that law enforcement agents can analyze on-chain activity and check know-your-customer information.
The Facebook CEO will be the second Facebook official to defend the cryptocurrency project before Congress, following his companyâs head of blockchain, David Marcus. Marcus testified before the Financial Services Committee (and its Senate counterpart) in July, articulating similar points about monetary policy.
Mark Zuckerberg speaks at Georgetown University, Oct. 17, 2019, screenshot via Facebook Live