High-level US regulators and officials spoke out in favor of expanding the adoption of blockchain technology across government and the private sector at the DC Blockchain Summit, held this week in the nationâs capital.
There, representatives from the Trump administration, Congress and executive branch agencies acknowledged the potential of blockchain, and called for further development at the technologyâs intersection with public policy. Specifically, they highlighted the technologyâs potential to streamline bureaucracy, empower consumers and drive economic growth.
Notably, Mark Calabria, chief economist for Vice President Mike Pence, made an unscheduled presentation Wednesday to tell the gathering that the administration of the president is encouraged by developments in blockchain technology.
He said thereâs an enthusiasm to see what possible applications exist in government, finance and elsewhere, particularly as the Treasury Department conducts a full review of the financial system.
Calabria told the gathering:
âWe are approaching this with an open mind. We recognize that weâre not necessarily the innovators, but what we can do is get out of the way and figure out where the government stops you from being innovative.â
Calabria also iterated that the presidentâs team wants to listen and learn from the blockchain community, as well as do what it can to lay the groundwork for further development.
Elsewhere, the co-chairs of the Congressional Blockchain Caucus addressed the conference and asserted that they are keen to get a stronger grasp on how the technology can be deployed in the public sector.
âWeâre very interested in helping to facilitate the deployment of blockchain technology in federal agencies and across the government,â said co-chair Jared Polis, a Democrat from Colorado.
He added:
âOur role is to prod government agencies to look at more efficient ways of doing things.â
David Schweikert, the Republican co-chair from Arizona, emphasized that one of the caucusâs main goals is to keep policymakers informed of the technologyâs transformative potential, and act as an emissary between government, industry and academia.
âHow do those of us who do policy not leap ahead and screw up what we donât know is coming tomorrow? Sometimes those of us who get elected are arrogant sometimes in what we think we know,â Schweikert said.
He continued:
âHow do we help our brothers and sisters in Congress understand this isnât just about cryptocurrency? Thereâs an incredible world out there thatâs so much bigger.â
Polis added that despite the heated partisan climate in Congress, heâs optimistic that blockchain could transcend partisan divides.
âThe utopian aspect of people being in control of their own information has broad appeal to both the left and the right,â he said.
Debbie Bucci, an IT architect at the Department of Health and Human Services, also spoke of her efforts to push for blockchain exploration within her department. Last year, her department issued its first-ever call for white papers on how blockchain technology could be applied in a healthcare setting, and earlier this month it held a blockchain hackathon.
Bucci suggested that her teamâs interest in blockchain has created a softened position within the rest of HHS.
âWe made a concerted effort to really get a better understanding about what blockchain is and what it isnât,â she said. âBecause we gave some level setting of what it is, even within my own agency they recognize the name, they recognize the term blockchain.â
Yet, there was an acknowledgement that the private sector has a role to play in the governmentâs adoption as well.
David Treat, managing director of financial services at Accenture, reckoned that the public sector openness to blockchain was not just political grandstanding, but evidence of an ongoing shift inside what are traditionally conservative, risk-averse entities.
Treat said:
âIt was a completely different dynamic of not being reactive and not being, âTell me what you did, and letâs opine on whether that was good or OK.â It was actually, âWe see this thing on the horizon, we know it has relevance â can you teach us?'â
Blockchain advocates say that adoption of the tech by the government will help normalize it for use in other sectors, and thereâs evidence that process is taking place.
The DC Blockchain Summit, in its second year, drew more than 450 developers, attorneys and consultants from 20 different countries, according to conference organizers.
Image courtesy of the Chamber of Digital Commerce