IMF Chief: Banks Shouldn't Fear Bitcoin or the Blockchain

The chief of the International Monetary Fund told a group of bankers this week that they don't have much to fear from bitcoin.

AccessTimeIconNov 5, 2015 at 10:00 p.m. UTC
Updated Aug 18, 2021 at 4:20 p.m. UTC

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Christine Lagarde, chief of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and finance minister under former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, said this week that banks don’t have much to fear from bitcoin or the blockchain.

The Financial Times reported today that, while speaking at a conference in New York City, Lagarde said attendees worried that the banking industry could be altered or rendered obsolete by the blockchain should "pause for a second".

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  • "Many of you have heard about not only bitcoins but blockchains and that unbelievable technology that underlies the bitcoins of this world at the moment, and how incredibly convenient it will be to actually generate trust and identify players and whatever pseudo they decide to use," she said, according to FT. "And many of you in the industry are actually worried that those technologies are going to massively disrupt the current industry."

    "Pause for a second," she is said to have told the bankers, continuing:

    "If those new technologies, and as long as those new technologies are going to abuse, take advantage of, the yield for anonymity, I think the banking industry has quite a few good days ahead of it as long as it takes ownership of those issues of capital and culture in order to actually restore the trust without which you see no trade, no transaction, no business can take place.”

    According to FT, Lagarde’s comments referenced a report by FT Alphaville’s Izabella Kaminska on the connection between the recent rise in the price of bitcoin and a suspected Ponzi scheme operating in Asia.

    Lagarde has run the IMF since 2011, when she took over from Dominique Strauss-Kahn, another former French finance minister who resigned from the IMF in the wake of sexual assault allegations and an arrest in New York City.

    Prior to serving as finance minister, Lagarde ran other French ministries, including the Ministry of Agriculture.

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