DAVOS, Switzerland â Consensus is building on one issue at the World Economic Forum in Switzerland: Cash is dead.
âPhysical money is out,â said B.S. Kohli, an economic advisor to the head of the Indian state of Punjab. Mothanna Gharaibeh, Jordanâs minister of digital economy and entrepreneurship, agreed.
As of this year, Gharaibeh said, Jordanians can no longer pay for government services, from taxes to hospital bills, with cash. They must use electronic payment systems like bank transfers or mobile wallets.Â
âItâs going to be a tough transformation,â he said, referring to the nationâs poor and unbanked populations. âBut refugees can take mobile wallets using their UN Refugee Agency ID cards. ⦠We just need to stop printing [bills] and put it instead on mobile accounts or in bank accounts.â
Unlike many dollar-dominance-skeptics in Davos for the forum, Gharaibeh said pegging Jordanian dinars to the dollar has served the smaller nation well for decades. He doesnât see any need to reinvent money, just remove the anonymous properties.Â
âBecause we need to stop tax evasion,â he said.Â
Israeli historian Yuval Noah Harari â author of the bitcoin community cult classic âSapiensâ â said heâs skeptical of bitcoin.Â
âMoney is going in the direction of more and more trust,â he said. âBitcoin is based on mistrust. Itâs basically a return to gold.âÂ
On the other hand, Harari predicted the complete elimination of financial privacy could happen âvery quickly,â which he described as a âdangerousâ prospect.
Ask almost any economist, banker or politician at the WEF about financial privacy and theyâll scoff. With shockingly few exceptions, most will say more financial data collection and passive surveillance will benefit society. (When pressed, they might emphasize the importance of encryption and regulating access to the data.)Â
RegTech expert Diana Paredes, an investment banker turned CEO of the compliance startup Suade Labs, agreed the sentiment among her public- and private-sector clients is âcash is dead.â However, she added, itâs the job of policymakers to protect consumer interests.
âWhat we should be doing is regulating privacy around [electronic payments],â she said. âI want to own my data. It should belong to me, not the bank.â
Fear not, bitcoiners: Not all members of the Davos elite are pushing for e-fiat authoritarianism; some leaders here see a future where bitcoin continues to thrive.
âBitcoin is a fantastic idea, as long as it is monitored,â Kohli said, praising the compliance standards already upheld by bitcoin-friendly Swiss banks.Â
Bruno Le Maire, the French finance minister, offers a shining example of a bitcoin-friendly politician.Â
He said decentralized digital assets will have a role to play in the future of France, as long as organizations like the crypto custody startup Ledger and the bitcoin development startup ACINQ continue to pay taxes and uphold regular compliance standards.Â
âWe donât want digital companies issuing their own currencies like sovereign states,â he said, making a subtle dig at Facebookâs Libra. âBut we believe [bitcoin] can reduce the costs and delays of international payments. ⦠We strongly believe in fintech.âÂ
Likewise, Mariam Al Muhairi of the state-backed Dubai Future Foundation says her team will spend 2020 exploring how to support companies that want to use digital assets.Â
âItâs to help regulate that area,â she said, emphasizing the team is still in the research phase. âThere are entities that do own and use [cryptocurrency].â
Paredes added the best way to protect bitcoinâs usability is to educate regulators about specific use cases so they can make laws and compliance standards without jeopardizing projects of value.
The divide between cypherpunks and banks grows ever more narrow when experts drill down to the specifics.
Most crypto veterans at the WEF were just as enthusiastic about central bank digital currencies (CBDC) as the bankers themselves.Â
For example, Elizabeth Rossiello, CEO of Aza Financial (formerly known by the name of its retail product, BitPesa), said sheâs âreally excitedâ about the Peopleâs Bank of China issuing a CBDC. She sees this as yet another customer onramp that complements the fact bitcoin makes up 7 percent of her companyâs monthly volume.
MakerDAO Foundation CEO Rune Christensen agrees: âGenerally I think itâs really good for the trend of digitizing the economy,â he said of the CBDC trend. âItâs just a step toward more blockchain adoption.â His projectâs DAI stablecoin, he told CoinDesk, could one day be the liquidity backbone for the worldâs CBDCs.
Meanwhile, Cloudflare CTO John Graham-Cumming said his internet infrastructure company generally takes a proactive approach to promoting censorship-resistance, even as his team supports clients such as banks and similar institutions in the public sector.
âWhat goes over our network isnât really our business. And we donât think itâs our job to figure that out because that would be kind of creepy,â he said, adding the company runs gateways to both ethereum and the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS).
From Graham-Cummingâs perspective, bitcoin is an impressive experiment because it actually works and continues to work, regardless of political and technical challenges. Yet, Cloudflare is more focused on ethereum.Â
âWhen you look at the smart contract stuff, thatâs a programming language. We think someone is going to build something interesting with ethereum and we hope theyâll find our services useful,â he said. âAs people start to work with new organizations for financial transactions, they need to ask how that organization is thinking about security. ⦠Weâre all resting on top of something else.â
The only way to protect privacy in a world of digital cash, he said, is with a combination of good regulatory policies and standard âbest practicesâ that promote security throughout the ecosystemâs architecture.
âThe idea of Web3 is that you should be resilient,â he concluded.
Zack Seward contributed reporting.