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Cryptocurrency Concept Is a 'Fallacy,' Says Finnish Central Bank Advisor

Cryptocurrency Concept Is a 'Fallacy,' Says Finnish Central Bank Advisor

Cryptocurrency Concept Is a 'Fallacy,' Says Finnish Central Bank Advisor

A paper published by the Bank of Finland explains why cryptocurrencies will never become a form of money.

A paper published by the Bank of Finland explains why cryptocurrencies will never become a form of money.

A paper published by the Bank of Finland explains why cryptocurrencies will never become a form of money.

AccessTimeIconJul 10, 2018, 8:15 PM
Updated Aug 18, 2021, 9:25 PM

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"The analysis shows that the concept of a digital currency is a fallacy."

Using digital currencies synonymously with the term cryptocurrencies, a paper published by the Bank of Finland and written by one of its advisors argues that cryptocurrencies aren't real forms of money.

According to Aleksi Grym, the central bank's digitalization advisor, cryptocurrencies are "not currencies at all but rather accounting systems for non-existent assets."

The "great illusion," he posits, results from how "poorly understood the concept of money still is" and the rather "confusing choice of terminology" featured in the original white paper authored by bitcoin's pseudonymous creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.

Zeroing in on the true functions of bitcoin, Grym draws parallels between how bitcoin works and how a traditional bank functions. First, with bitcoin, the accountants in a traditional bank are akin to the miners. Second, the centralized ledger held by banks to record account balances and transactions are akin to the bitcoin blockchain.

As Grym notes:

"The only difference between a cryptocurrency system and a traditional ledger system is that in a cryptocurrency system the ledger is distributed across a network of computers, while a traditional bank maintains the ledger in a centralised computer system. There is, however, no practical difference in what the systems do."

He goes on to add: "Money, at its essence, is a unit of account." So while cryptocurrencies may act as an excellent "kind of financial record-keeping device comparable to an account book," it will neither replace the forms of money currently in existence nor ever become the singular form of money in existence without institutional backing.

Whether the Bank of Finland agrees with Grym is perhaps beside the point; back in 2014, the central bank classified bitcoin as a kind of commodity rather than a currency.

Yet the subject remains one of interest for the institution, having published multiple research papers that explore the multifaceted issues surrounding cryptocurrencies and blockchain.

Finland flag image via Shutterstock

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