Trends in crypto-currencies and blockchain technologies: A monetary theory and regulation perspective
This provides a theoretical and regulatory framework for understanding digital currencies, but it is primarily a review/survey paper with incremental analysis.
The paper examines the emergence of crypto-currencies and blockchain technologies from monetary theory and regulation perspectives, analyzing their value without government backing and assessing global regulatory readiness for transactions involving these currencies.
The internet era has generated a requirement for low cost, anonymous and rapidly verifiable transactions to be used for online barter, and fast settling money have emerged as a consequence. For the most part, e-money has fulfilled this role, but the last few years have seen two new types of money emerge. Centralised virtual currencies, usually for the purpose of transacting in social and gaming economies, and crypto-currencies, which aim to eliminate the need for financial intermediaries by offering direct peer-to-peer online payments. We describe the historical context which led to the development of these currencies and some modern and recent trends in their uptake, in terms of both usage in the real economy and as investment products. As these currencies are purely digital constructs, with no government or local authority backing, we then discuss them in the context of monetary theory, in order to determine how they may be have value under each. Finally, we provide an overview of the state of regulatory readiness in terms of dealing with transactions in these currencies in various regions of the world.