James Bullard, president of the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank, said Monday that cryptocurrencies âare creating drift toward a non-uniform currency in the U.S.â
Bullard spoke on the history and economics of private currencies at CoinDeskâs Consensus 2018 conference in New York, drawing on his work in this area. He told attendees that public and private currencies can âcoexist in equilibriumâ and even âfacilitate transactions that might not otherwise occur.â
But U.S. history shows that currency competition often causes more problems than it solves, he contended. In the 1830s, 90 percent of the currency in circulation was privately issued, with the uniform âgreenbackâ only coming into use during the Civil War.
âYou would have Bank of America banknotes, Wells Fargo banknotes,â Bullard said, but âthey all traded at a discount.â
With over 1,800 cryptocurrencies having been issued as of today, Bullard said there was a risk of drifting back towards that kind of âchaos of exchange rates.â Consumers could find themselves having to hold multiple forms of currencies for different transactions, he said, with each trading at a different relative price â not to mention the risk that a currency tanks, taking the consumerâs savings with it.
âCurrencies have to be reliable and hold their value,â Bullard said, using the hyperinflationary Venezuelan bolivar as an example.
As for whether cryptocurrencies âmight be able to protect us from the vagaries of Venezuelan monetary policy,â Bullard pointed to a few issues.
First, transactions using these currencies might be illegal. Ignoring that, though cryptocurrenciesâ monetary frameworks may not be as reliable as some proponents claim.
Bitcoin, for example, has a fixed supply of 21 million bitcoin, but âthe system can still bifurcate, creating two fixed volumes of coins.â In Bullardâs opinion, problems with monetary policy are ânot mitigated by commodity-based money nor by cryptocurrencies.â
Following Bullardâs opening remarks, he was joined by Diane Brady, journalist and founder of dbOmnimedia, for a fireside chat. She asked if government control was the only way to guarantee a stable monetary system. Bullard replied:
âThis century, the past century itâs been true. Will it always be that way? I donât know. Maybe there are technological solutions.â
For the time being, he said, cryptocurrencies arenât a threat to the dollarâs dominance because of their low transaction volumes. âThe dollarâs in great shape today,â he said. âIt will stay in great shape.â
In the long term, however, the rise of cryptocurrencies could usher in something that looks like todayâs global monetary system. Thereâs no single world currency, Bullard said, and exchange rates even among major currencies can be volatile.
Bullard concluded:
âThe drift to a non-uniform currency could become a serious issue for the U.S. if cryptocurrency reaches a large volume of trade.â
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