Advertisement

Abacus | Why Facebook’s answer to bitcoin and WeChat Pay, libra, is doomed to fail

  • Mark Zuckerberg is hoping to take on Tencent’s WeChat Pay and thinks he has found a way around the problems faced by bitcoin
  • He hasn’t: consumers will have no incentive to use libra, governments have every reason to oppose it

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
(FILES) In this file photo taken on May 1, 2018 Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks during the annual F8 summit at the San Jose McEnery Convention Center in San Jose, California. - Facebook is leaping into the world of cryptocurrency with its own digital money, designed to let people save, send or spend money as easily as firing off text messages."Libra" -- described as "a new global currency" -- was unveiled June 18, 2019 in a new initiative in payments for the world's biggest social network with the potential to bring crypto-money out of the shadows and into the mainstream. Facebook and an array of partners released a prototype of Libra as an open source code to be used by developers interested in weaving it into apps, services or businesses ahead of a rollout as global digital money next year. (Photo by JOSH EDELSON / AFP)
“Move fast and break things. Unless you are breaking stuff, you are not moving fast enough,” Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg once said.
Advertisement

Today Facebook is racing as fast as it can to break the global financial architecture, before the world’s big governments can shatter its existing business model.

It will lose the race.

Last week the US social media giant announced plans to launch a new “global currency” called libra. The idea is to use a smartphone app to create an international payments system for a new electronic currency, similar to bitcoin, to rival and even displace existing national currencies.

You can see why “Zuck” is going down this path. A third of the world’s population is now signed up to Facebook’s social media and messaging services. This has allowed Facebook to exploit users’ data to sell targeted advertising on a vast scale.

Advertisement
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is looking for new revenue streams. Photo: AFP
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is looking for new revenue streams. Photo: AFP
Advertisement