Bitcoin, like other virtual currencies, is fundamentally not a currency, the head of the Chinese central bankâs financial survey and statistics department, Sheng Song Cheng, wrote in an opinion piece published online on 2nd January.
Shengâs piece added that it would be difficult to see how bitcoin could ever be considered a currency in the future.
Although Shengâs view underlines the central bankâs official position laid out last month, which states that bitcoin is not a currency âwith real meaningâ, the statistics head took the additional step of labelling the cryptocurrency a âutopiaâ for those with beliefs in technology and liberalism verging on the extreme.
The English-language edition of the Global Times, a newspaper published by the conservative Peopleâs Daily, reported Shengâs phrasing in a news piece as:
âBitcoin is merely a utopia for technology supremacists and absolute liberalists.â
Shengâs department is responsible for developing the statistics system for Chinaâs financial sector and designing the accounting system related to monetary statistics, among other duties.
Commenters appeared to disagree with Shengâs views. The top comment on Shengâs piece, which was published in the opinion pages of leading news portal Sina, sarcastically asked:
âStates can wither away too, my friend. Can you please show more vision?â
Chinaâs central bank banned financial institutions from dealing in bitcoin after declaring on 5th December that the digital currency didnât have the legal status of a âcurrency with real meaningâ. However, individuals remain free to deal in bitcoin.
The Peopleâs Bank of China, the countryâs central bank, has been closely watched for signals of its attitude towards regulating bitcoin and other digital currencies.
The PBOCâs statement in December sent bitcoinâs price into a nosedive, shedding $300 in a single morning on Mt. Gox. The CoinDesk Bitcoin Price Index lost $555 over two days.
On 16th December, news leaked that the PBOC had taken the additional step of barring third-party payment companies from working with bitcoin exchanges. Bitcoinâs value fell by 22% at its lowest point within 24 hours of the announcement, according to the BPI.