Blockchain Front Page: Can a Cryptocurrency replace the US Dollar to Become the World’s Reserve Currency?

104950444-GettyImages-869024458.1910x1000.jpg

Last week our theme was “Lightning Network is the Bitcoin story that matters in 2019.

Our theme for this week is “Can a Cryptocurrency replace the US Dollar to Become the World’s Reserve Currency?”

While most people today are not ready to give up their bank accounts for Bitcoin wallets, it will be a crypto currency that’s going to replace the US dollar. The dollar’s death will be on blockchain and I believe it will be Bitcoin that dethrones the dollar.

In an article on Medium, Facebook isn’t just thinking about just creating his own crypto, it wants to replace the U.S. dollar according to Ted Livingston. The founder and CEO of the Kik messaging app, predicted Facebook’s crypto coin could eventually replace the US dollar.

After the end of WWII, the U.S. dollar has dominated the global financial system, just like the British pound before it, and the Spanish dollar before that. But, some of the major economies around the world may want a new digital currency to function as the reserve. The US dollar’s share of global central-bank reserves hit a 5-year low, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Global-Reserve-Currencies-USD-share-annual-2018-Q3-1.png

How much U.S. currency is out there? According to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, approximately $1.70 trillion in circulation as of January 23, 2019, of which $1.66 trillion was in Federal Reserve notes.  That figure could drop to as low as $500 billion within 10 years, as Bitcoin, and cryptocurrencies in general, become more widely used for transactions.

Bitcoin, Facebook Coin or another crypto could be a clear alternative to traditional government-backed currencies, at a time when governments’ abilities to manage their finances are coming into question.

Could Bitcoin replace the U.S. dollar as the global reserve currency?

Coinbase Cofounder/CEO Brian Armstrong says the answer is yes. He predicted that the digital currency may very well supplant the greenback by 2030. For that to happen, Bitcoin needs to overcome several obstacles: 1) it must be an effective medium of exchange, so we can buy goods using it 2) it must function as a store of value 3) it needs to function as a unit of account.

Private companies, banks and countries around the world are racing to lead the next revolution in financial technology. Currently, there are more than 1,500 digital currencies and tokens out there, serving a variety of uses.

What would happen if a dominant market force like Amazon entered the cryptocurrency market and began accepting crypto as a payment method? Imagine a cryptocurrency from a company like Amazon. An Amazon cryptocurrency wouldn’t just change the face of the world’s largest online retailer. It would change the world.

Central banks from China to England and Uruguay are considering issuing their own crypto. State-backed cryptocurrencies are pointless, but they can serve as a stepping stone to decentralization. They represent a break away from a US fiat financial dominance.

Russia has begun a major research and development in blockchain, so that financial transactions can be processed and verified without reliance on Western-controlled banks.

One catalyst for the erosion of the US dollar hegemony is the development of SWIFT alternatives. This year has also seen several of crypto-based alternatives coming from Argentina, Russia, and Germany.

The International Monetary Fund, IMF, has already announced efforts to put its world money, the special drawing right, SDR, on a distributed ledger. This would make the SDR a global cryptocurrency for settling balance of payments transactions among China, Russia and other IMF members, also without reliance on the dollar payments system.

Blockchain, the technology behind Bitcoin, is nothing less than the operating system of an entirely new economy. For the first time in the history of mankind, this technology could render politicians, central banks, governments and large corporations as we know them obsolete when it comes to our money.

And it’s only booting up now.

Image Source

Ilias Louis Hatzis is the Founder & CEO at Mercato Blockchain Corporation AG. He writes the Blockchain Weekly Front Page each Monday.

I have no positions or commercial relationships with the companies or people mentioned. I am not receiving compensation for this post.

Subscribe by email to join the 25,000 other Fintech leaders who read our research daily to stay ahead of the curve. Check out our advisory services (how we pay for this free original research).

 

5 comments

  1. There are much more USD in circulation than 1.7 trillion. In addition to banknotes and coins, there is about the same amount of central bank dollars held by depository institutions. The USD in circulation outside of the Federal Reserve and the Treasury (i.e. the USD held at depository institutions) would also need to be considered. If we take M1 (liquid deposits) this would add another USD 1.65. trillion. How do these USD 5 trillion compare to the value of the 1500 crypto currencies?

  2. I have been following Daily Fintech for months now and this article is the one that nicely explain how fiat is declining. Cryptocurrencies are making an inroad into the money sphere and is not the the preeogative of States or central banks.

    Kudos for this well written article, I wish I could translate in french for not really served audiences.

    Cheers!

    Ehoussoud

  3. While I support Bitcoin and Lightning until the Bitcoin volatility issue is resolved I cannot see people using it as currency in their day to day lives unless the Fiat currencies become more volatile as we have seen in a few countries over the passed years. However I cannot believe the likes if the USD, Euro and British pound will go that way.

  4. While I support Bitcoin and Lightning until the Bitcoin volatility issue is resolved I cannot see people using it as currency in their day to day lives unless the Fiat currencies become more volatile as we have seen in a few countries over the passed years. However I cannot believe the likes if the USD, Euro and British pound will go that way.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.