The View | Why Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency has banks and regulators scrambling to respond
- The cryptocurrency could massively disrupt the existing system, by undermining government sovereignty over local currencies and allowing capital flight, even threaten half of banks’ turnovers
Why are established companies moving into new industries? Modern communications technology has made automation essential for firms to retain their competitive edge. Any product or service with a digital component, no matter how regulated, is fair game for new entrants, new market structures, and new rules of competition that may require new regulations to keep the playing field level.
Regulators have not yet decided how to regulate platform companies that no longer merely sell widgets but instead form, and benefit from, new markets that their platforms facilitate. These companies connect consumers to third-party sellers, to one another, and often to advertisers by reselling consumers’ data. Mobile operators embraced the first iPhone via exclusive resale deals and customer contracts to subsidise handsets in return for subscriptions to operators’ service. Both Apple and mobile operators profited from such arrangements.
Now Facebook is disrupting again by copying the best attributes of cryptocurrencies, blockchain platforms and decentralised systems. To keep from getting disrupted, Facebook’s centralised operation is developing its own decentralised platform with a consortium, including payments companies and telcos. The move is a gentler version of the “kill zone” that big internet players used for years to acquire or smother start-ups that could challenge their dominance.